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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
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+
+Title: Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+
+Author: Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+Release Date: October, 2005 [EBook #9105]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on September 8, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORAL MAXIMS ***
+
+
+
+{Transcriber's notes: spelling variants are preserved (e.g. labour
+instead of labor, criticise instead of criticize, etc.); words that
+were italicized appear in all CAPITALS; the translators' comments are
+in square brackets [...] as they are in the text; footnotes are indicated
+by * and appear in angled brackets <...> immediately following the passage
+containing the note (in the text they appear at the bottom of the page);
+and, finally, I give corrections and addenda in curly brackets {...}.}
+
+
+
+Rochefoucauld
+
+
+"As Rochefoucauld his maxims drew
+From Nature--I believe them true.
+They argue no corrupted mind
+In him; the fault is in mankind."--Swift.
+
+"Les Maximes de la Rochefoucauld sont des proverbs des
+gens d'esprit."--Montesquieu.
+
+"Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations."--Sir J.
+Mackintosh.
+
+"Translators should not work alone; for good ET PROPRIA VERBA
+do not always occur to one mind."--Luther's TABLE TALK, iii.
+
+
+
+Reflections; or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+
+By
+
+Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld,
+Prince de Marsillac.
+
+Translated from the Editions of 1678 and 1827 with introduction,
+notes, and some account of the author and his times.
+
+By
+
+J. W. Willis Bund, M.A. LL.B
+and
+J. Hain Friswell
+
+Simpson Low, Son, and Marston,
+188, Fleet Street.
+1871.
+
+
+
+{Translators'} Preface.
+
+
+Some apology must be made for an attempt
+"to translate the untranslatable." Not-
+withstanding there are no less than eight
+English translations of La Rochefoucauld, hardly
+any are readable, none are free from faults, and all
+fail more or less to convey the author's meaning.
+Though so often translated, there is not a complete
+English edition of the Maxims and Reflections. All
+the translations are confined exclusively to the
+Maxims, none include the Reflections. This may be
+accounted for, from the fact that most of the trans-
+lations are taken from the old editions of the
+Maxims, in which the Reflections do not appear.
+Until M. Suard devoted his attention to the text
+of Rochefoucauld, the various editions were but
+reprints of the preceding ones, without any regard
+to the alterations made by the author in the later
+editions published during his life-time. So much
+was this the case, that Maxims which had been
+rejected by Rochefoucauld in his last edition, were
+still retained in the body of the work. To give
+but one example, the celebrated Maxim as to the
+misfortunes of our friends, was omitted in the last
+edition of the book, published in Rochefoucauld's
+life-time, yet in every English edition this Maxim
+appears in the body of the work.
+
+M. Aime Martin in 1827 published an edition
+of the Maxims and Reflections which has ever since
+been the standard text of Rochefoucauld in France.
+The Maxims are printed from the edition of 1678,
+the last published during the author's life, and the
+last which received his corrections. To this edition
+were added two Supplements; the first containing
+the Maxims which had appeared in the editions of
+1665, 1666, and 1675, and which were afterwards
+omitted; the second, some additional Maxims
+found among various of the author's manuscripts
+in the Royal Library at Paris. And a Series of Re-
+flections which had been previously published in a
+work called "Receuil de pieces d'histoire et de litte-
+rature." Paris, 1731. They were first published
+with the Maxims in an edition by Gabriel Brotier.
+
+In an edition of Rochefoucauld entitled "Reflex-
+ions, ou Sentences et Maximes Morales, augmentees
+de plus deux cent nouvelles Maximes et Maximes
+et Pensees diverses suivant les copies Imprimees a
+Paris, chez Claude Barbin, et Matre Cramoisy
+1692,"* some fifty Maxims were added, ascribed
+by the editor to Rochefoucauld, and as his family
+allowed them to be published under his name, it
+seems probable they were genuine. These fifty
+form the third supplement to this book.
+
+*<In all the French editions this book is spoken of as
+published in 1693. The only copy I have seen is in the
+Cambridge University Library, 47, 16, 81, and is called
+"Reflexions Morales.">
+
+The apology for the present edition of Rochefou-
+cauld must therefore be twofold: firstly, that it is
+an attempt to give the public a complete English
+edition of Rochefoucauld's works as a moralist.
+The body of the work comprises the Maxims
+as the author finally left them, the first supple-
+ment, those published in former editions, and
+rejected by the author in the later; the second, the
+unpublished Maxims taken from the author's cor-
+respondence and manuscripts, and the third, the
+Maxims first published in 1692. While the Re-
+flections, in which the thoughts in the Maxims are
+extended and elaborated, now appear in English
+for the first time. And secondly, that it is an
+attempt (to quote the preface of the edition of
+1749) "to do the Duc de la Rochefoucauld the
+justice to make him speak English."
+
+
+
+{Translators'} Introduction
+
+
+The description of the "ancien regime" in
+France, "a despotism tempered by epigrams,"
+like most epigrammatic sentences, contains
+some truth, with much fiction. The society of
+the last half of the seventeenth, and the whole of the
+eighteenth centuries, was doubtless greatly influenced
+by the precise and terse mode in which the popular
+writers of that date expressed their thoughts. To a
+people naturally inclined to think that every possible
+view, every conceivable argument, upon a question is
+included in a short aphorism, a shrug, and the word
+"voila," truths expressed in condensed sentences must
+always have a peculiar charm. It is, perhaps, from this
+love of epigram, that we find so many eminent
+French writers of maxims. Pascal, De Retz, La
+Rochefoucauld, La Bruyere, Montesquieu, and Vau-
+venargues, each contributed to the rich stock of French
+epigrams. No other country can show such a list
+of brilliant writers--in England certainly we can-
+not. Our most celebrated, Lord Bacon, has, by
+his other works, so surpassed his maxims, that their
+fame is, to a great measure, obscured. The only
+Englishman who could have rivalled La Rochefou-
+cauld or La Bruyere was the Earl of Chesterfield, and
+he only could have done so from his very inti-
+mate connexion with France; but unfortunately his
+brilliant genius was spent in the impossible task of
+trying to refine a boorish young Briton, in "cutting
+blocks with a razor."
+
+Of all the French epigrammatic writers La Rochefou-
+cauld is at once the most widely known, and the most
+distinguished. Voltaire, whose opinion on the cen-
+tury of Louis XIV. is entitled to the greatest weight,
+says, "One of the works that most largely contributed
+to form the taste of the nation, and to diffuse a spirit
+of justice and precision, is the collection of maxims,
+by Francois Duc de la Rochefoucauld."
+
+This Francois, the second Duc de la Rochefoucauld,
+Prince de Marsillac, the author of the maxims, was
+one of the most illustrious members of the most illus-
+trious families among the French noblesse. Descended
+from the ancient Dukes of Guienne, the founder of
+the Family Fulk or Foucauld, a younger branch of
+the House of Lusignan, was at the commencement of
+the eleventh century the Seigneur of a small town,
+La Roche, in the Angounois. Our chief knowledge of
+this feudal lord is drawn from the monkish chronicles.
+As the benefactor of the various abbeys and monas-
+teries in his province, he is naturally spoken of by
+them in terms of eulogy, and in the charter of one of
+the abbeys of Angouleme he is called, "vir nobilissimus
+Fulcaldus." His territorial power enabled him to
+adopt what was then, as is still in Scotland, a com-
+mon custom, to prefix the name of his estate to his
+surname, and thus to create and transmit to his
+descendants the illustrious surname of La Rochefou-
+cauld.
+
+From that time until that great crisis in the history
+of the French aristocracy, the Revolution of 1789, the
+family of La Rochefoucauld have been, "if not first, in
+the very first line" of that most illustrious body. One
+Seigneur served under Philip Augustus against Richard
+Coeur de Lion, and was made prisoner at the battle
+of Gisors. The eighth Seigneur Guy performed a great
+tilt at Bordeaux, attended (according to Froissart) to
+the Lists by some two hundred of his kindred and
+relations. The sixteenth Seigneur Francais was cham-
+berlain to Charles VIII. and Louis XII., and stood
+at the font as sponsor, giving his name to that last
+light of French chivalry, Francis I. In 1515 he was
+created a baron, and was afterwards advanced to a
+count, on account of his great service to Francis and
+his predecessors.
+
+The second count pushed the family fortune still
+further by obtaining a patent as the Prince de Mar-
+sillac. His widow, Anne de Polignac, entertained
+Charles V. at the family chateau at Verteuil, in so
+princely a manner that on leaving Charles observed,
+"He had never entered a house so redolent of high
+virtue, uprightness, and lordliness as that mansion."
+
+The third count, after serving with distinction
+under the Duke of Guise against the Spaniards, was
+made prisoner at St. Quintin, and only regained his
+liberty to fall a victim to the "bloody infamy" of St.
+Bartholomew. His son, the fourth count, saved with
+difficulty from that massacre, after serving with dis-
+tinction in the religious wars, was taken prisoner
+in a skirmish at St. Yriex la Perche, and murdered
+by the Leaguers in cold blood.
+
+The fifth count, one of the ministers of Louis
+XIII., after fighting against the English and Buck-
+ingham at the Ile de Re, was created a duke. His
+son Francis, the second duke, by his writings has
+made the family name a household word.
+
+The third duke fought in many of the earlier cam-
+paigns of Louis XIV. at Torcy, Lille, Cambray, and
+was dangerously wounded at the passage of the Rhine.
+From his bravery he rose to high favour at Court, and
+was appointed Master of the Horse (Grand Veneur)
+and Lord Chamberlain. His son, the fourth duke,
+commanded the regiment of Navarre, and took part
+in storming the village of Neerwinden on the day
+when William III. was defeated at Landen. He was
+afterwards created Duc de la Rochequyon and Marquis
+de Liancourt.
+
+The fifth duke, banished from Court by Louis XV.,
+became the friend of the philosopher Voltaire.
+
+The sixth duke, the friend of Condorcet, was the
+last of the long line of noble lords who bore that
+distinguished name. In those terrible days of Sep-
+tember, 1792, when the French people were proclaim-
+ing universal humanity, the duke was seized as an
+aristocrat by the mob at Gisors and put to death
+behind his own carriage, in which sat his mother and
+his wife, at the very place where, some six centuries
+previously, his ancestor had been taken prisoner in
+a fair fight. A modern writer has spoken of this
+murder "as an admirable reprisal upon the grandson
+for the writings and conduct of the grandfather."
+But M. Sainte Beuve observes as to this, he can see
+nothing admirable in the death of the duke, and if it
+proves anything, it is only that the grandfather was
+not so wrong in his judgment of men as is usually
+supposed.
+
+Francis, the author, was born on the 15th December
+1615. M. Sainte Beuve divides his life into four
+periods, first, from his birth till he was thirty-five, when
+he became mixed up in the war of the Fronde; the
+second period, during the progress of that war; the
+third, the twelve years that followed, while he re-
+covered from his wounds, and wrote his maxims dur-
+ing his retirement from society; and the last from
+that time till his death.
+
+In the same way that Herodotus calls each book of
+his history by the name of one of the muses, so each
+of these four periods of La Rochefoucauld's life may
+be associated with the name of a woman who was for
+the time his ruling passion. These four ladies are the
+Duchesse de Chevreuse, the Duchesse de Longueville,
+Madame de Sable, and Madame de La Fayette.
+
+La Rochefoucauld's early education was neglected;
+his father, occupied in the affairs of state, either had
+not, or did not devote any time to his education. His
+natural talents and his habits of observation soon,
+however, supplied all deficiencies. By birth and sta-
+tion placed in the best society of the French Court,
+he soon became a most finished courtier. Knowing
+how precarious Court favour then was, his father,
+when young Rochefoucauld was only nine years old,
+sent him into the army. He was subsequently at-
+tached to the regiment of Auvergne. Though but
+sixteen he was present, and took part in the mili-
+tary operations at the siege of Cassel. The Court of
+Louis XIII. was then ruled imperiously by Richelieu.
+The Duke de la Rochefoucauld was strongly opposed
+to the Cardinal's party. By joining in the plots of
+Gaston of Orleans, he gave Richelieu an opportunity
+of ridding Paris of his opposition. When those plots
+were discovered, the Duke was sent into a sort of
+banishment to Blois. His son, who was then at
+Court with him, was, upon the pretext of a liaison
+with Mdlle. d'Hautefort, one of the ladies in waiting
+on the Queen (Anne of Austria), but in reality to pre-
+vent the Duke learning what was passing at Paris, sent
+with his father. The result of the exile was Roche-
+foucauld's marriage. With the exception that his
+wife's name was Mdlle. Vivonne, and that she was
+the mother of five sons and three daughters, nothing
+is known of her. While Rochefoucauld and his
+father were at Blois, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, one
+of the beauties of the Court, and the mistress of
+Louis, was banished to Tours. She and Rochefou-
+cauld met, and soon became intimate, and for a time
+she was destined to be the one motive of his actions.
+The Duchesse was engaged in a correspondence with
+the Court of Spain and the Queen. Into this plot
+Rochefoucauld threw himself with all his energy; his
+connexion with the Queen brought him back to his
+old love Mdlle. d'Hautefort, and led him to her
+party, which he afterwards followed. The course he
+took shut him off from all chance of Court favour.
+The King regarded him with coldness, the Cardinal
+with irritation. Although the Bastile and the scaffold,
+the fate of Chalais and Montmorency, were before his
+eyes, they failed to deter him from plotting. He was
+about twenty-three; returning to Paris, he warmly
+sided with the Queen. He says in his Memoirs
+that the only persons she could then trust were him-
+self and Mdlle. d'Hautefort, and it was proposed he
+should take both of them from Paris to Brussels. Into
+this plan he entered with all his youthful indiscretion,
+it being for several reasons the very one he would wish
+to adopt, as it would strengthen his influence with
+Anne of Austria, place Richelieu and his master in an
+uncomfortable position, and save Mdlle. d'Hautefort
+from the attentions the King was showing her.
+
+But Richelieu of course discovered this plot, and
+Rochefoucauld was, of course, sent to the Bastile.
+He was liberated after a week's imprisonment, but
+banished to his chateau at Verteuil.
+
+The reason for this clemency was that the Cardinal
+desired to win Rochefoucauld from the Queen's party.
+A command in the army was offered to him, but by
+the Queen's orders refused.
+
+For some three years Rochefoucauld remained at
+Verteuil, waiting the time for his reckoning with
+Richelieu; speculating on the King's death, and the
+favours he would then receive from the Queen. During
+this period he was more or less engaged in plotting
+against his enemy the Cardinal, and hatching treason
+with Cinq Mars and De Thou.
+
+M. Sainte Beuve says, that unless we study this first
+part of Rochefoucauld's life, we shall never under-
+stand his maxims. The bitter disappointment of the
+passionate love, the high hopes then formed, the deceit
+and treachery then witnessed, furnished the real key to
+their meaning. The cutting cynicism of the morality
+was built on the ruins of that chivalrous ambition and
+romantic affection. He saw his friend Cinq Mars
+sent to the scaffold, himself betrayed by men whom
+he had trusted, and the only reason he could assign
+for these actions was intense selfishness.
+
+Meanwhile, Richelieu died. Rochefoucauld re-
+turned to Court, and found Anne of Austria regent,
+and Mazarin minister. The Queen's former friends
+flocked there in numbers, expecting that now their
+time of prosperity had come. They were bitterly dis-
+appointed. Mazarin relied on hope instead of grati-
+tude, to keep the Queen's adherents on his side. The
+most that any received were promises that were never
+performed. In after years, doubtless, Rochefoucauld's
+recollection of his disappointment led him to write the
+maxim: "We promise according to our hopes, we per-
+form according to our fears." But he was not even to
+receive promises; he asked for the Governorship of
+Havre, which was then vacant. He was flatly refused.
+Disappointment gave rise to anger, and uniting with
+his old flame, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, who had
+received the same treatment, and with the Duke of
+Beaufort, they formed a conspiracy against the govern-
+ment. The plot was, of course, discovered and crushed.
+Beaufort was arrested, the Duchesse banished. Irri-
+tated and disgusted, Rochefoucauld went with the
+Duc d'Enghein, who was then joining the army, on a
+campaign, and here he found the one love of his life,
+the Duke's sister, Mdme. de Longueville. This lady,
+young, beautiful, and accomplished, obtained a great
+ascendancy over Rochefoucauld, and was the cause of
+his taking the side of Conde in the subsequent civil
+war. Rochefoucauld did not stay long with the army.
+He was badly wounded at the siege of Mardik, and
+returned from thence to Paris. On recovering from
+his wounds, the war of the Fronde broke out. This
+war is said to have been most ridiculous, as being
+carried on without a definite object, a plan, or a
+leader. But this description is hardly correct; it was
+the struggle of the French nobility against the rule
+of the Court; an attempt, the final attempt, to re-
+cover their lost influence over the state, and to save
+themselves from sinking under the rule of cardinals
+and priests.
+
+With the general history of that war we have
+nothing to do; it is far too complicated and too
+confused to be stated here. The memoirs of Roche-
+foucauld and De Retz will give the details to those
+who desire to trace the contests of the factions--the
+course of the intrigues. We may confine ourselves to
+its progress so far as it relates to the Duc de la Roche-
+foucauld.
+
+On the Cardinal causing the Princes de Conde
+and Conti, and the Duc de Longueville, to be
+arrested, Rochefoucauld and the Duchess fled into
+Normandy. Leaving her at Dieppe, he went into
+Poitou, of which province he had some years pre-
+viously bought the post of governor. He was there
+joined by the Duc de Bouillon, and he and the Duke
+marched to, and occupied Bordeaux. Cardinal Ma-
+zarin and Marechal de la Meilleraie advanced in force
+on Bordeaux, and attacked the town. A bloody
+battle followed. Rochefoucauld defended the town
+with the greatest bravery, and repulsed the Cardinal.
+Notwithstanding the repulse, the burghers of Bor-
+deaux were anxious to make peace, and save the city
+from destruction. The Parliament of Bordeaux com-
+pelled Rochefoucauld to surrender. He did so, and
+returned nominally to Poitou, but in reality in secret
+to Paris.
+
+There he found the Queen engaged in trying to
+maintain her position by playing off the rival parties
+of the Prince Conde and the Cardinal De Retz against
+each other. Rochefoucauld eagerly espoused his old
+party--that of Conde. In August, 1651, the contend-
+ing parties met in the Hall of the Parliament of Paris,
+and it was with great difficulty they were prevented
+from coming to blows even there. It is even said that
+Rochefoucauld had ordered his followers to murder
+De Retz.
+
+Rochefoucauld was soon to undergo a bitter disap-
+pointment. While occupied with party strife and
+faction in Paris, Madame de Chevreuse left him,
+and formed an alliance with the Duc de Nemours.
+Rochefoucauld still loved her. It was, probably,
+thinking of this that he afterwards wrote, "Jealousy is
+born with love, but does not die with it." He endea-
+voured to get Madame de Chatillon, the old mistress
+of the Duc de Nemours, reinstated in favour, but in
+this he did not succeed. The Duc de Nemours was
+soon after killed in a duel. The war went on, and
+after several indecisive skirmishes, the decisive battle
+was fought at Paris, in the Faubourg St. Antoine,
+where the Parisians first learnt the use or the abuse
+of their favourite defence, the barricade. In this
+battle, Rochefoucauld behaved with great bravery.
+He was wounded in the head, a wound which for a
+time deprived him of his sight. Before he recovered,
+the war was over, Louis XIV. had attained his ma-
+jority, the gold of Mazarin, the arms of Turenne, had
+been successful, the French nobility were vanquished,
+the court supremacy established.
+
+This completed Rochefoucauld's active life.
+
+When he recovered his health, he devoted himself
+to society. Madame de Sable assumed a hold over
+him. He lived a quiet life, and occupied himself in
+composing an account of his early life, called his
+"Memoirs," and his immortal "Maxims."
+
+From the time he ceased to take part in public life,
+Rochefoucauld's real glory began. Having acted the
+various parts of soldier, politician, and lover with but
+small success, he now commenced the part of moralist,
+by which he is known to the world.
+
+Living in the most brilliant society that France
+possessed, famous from his writings, distinguished
+from the part he had taken in public affairs, he
+formed the centre of one of those remarkable French
+literary societies, a society which numbered among its
+members La Fontaine, Racine, Boileau. Among his
+most attached friends was Madame de La Fayette (the
+authoress of the "Princess of Cleeves"), and this friend-
+ship continued until his death. He was not, however,
+destined to pass away in that gay society without
+some troubles. At the passage of the Rhine in 1672
+two of his sons were engaged; the one was killed,
+the other severely wounded. Rochefoucauld was
+much affected by this, but perhaps still more by the
+death of the young Duc de Longueville, who perished
+on the same occasion.
+
+Sainte Beuve says that the cynical book and that
+young life were the only fruits of the war of the
+Fronde. Madame de Sevigne, who was with him
+when he heard the news of the death of so much that
+was dear to him, says, "I saw his heart laid bare on that
+cruel occasion, and his courage, his merit, his tender-
+ness, and good sense surpassed all I ever met with. I
+hold his wit and accomplishments as nothing in com-
+parison." The combined effect of his wounds and the
+gout caused the last years of Rochefoucauld's life to
+be spent in great pain. Madame de Sevigne, who
+was {with} him continually during his last illness, speaks of
+the fortitude with which he bore his sufferings as
+something to be admired. Writing to her daughter,
+she says, "Believe me, it is not for nothing he has
+moralised all his life; he has thought so often on his
+last moments that they are nothing new or unfamiliar
+to him."
+
+In his last illness, the great moralist was attended
+by the great divine, Bossuet. Whether that match-
+less eloquence or his own philosophic calm had,
+in spite of his writings, brought him into the state
+Madame de Sevigne describes, we know not; but
+one, or both, contributed to his passing away in a
+manner that did not disgrace a French noble or a
+French philosopher. On the 11th March, 1680, he
+ended his stormy life in peace after so much strife, a
+loyal subject after so much treason.
+
+One of his friends, Madame Deshoulieres, shortly
+before he died sent him an ode on death, which
+aptly describes his state--
+ "Oui, soyez alors plus ferme,
+ Que ces vulgaires humains
+ Qui, pres de leur dernier terme,
+ De vaines terreurs sont pleins.
+ En sage que rien n'offense,
+ Livrez-vous sans resistance
+ A d'inevitables traits;
+ Et, d'une demarche egale,
+ Passez cette onde fatal
+ Qu'on ne repasse jamais."
+
+Rochefoucauld left behind him only two works, the
+one, Memoirs of his own time, the other the Maxims.
+The first described the scenes in which his youth had
+been spent, and though written in a lively style,
+and giving faithful pictures of the intrigues and the
+scandals of the court during Louis XIV.'s minority,
+yet, except to the historian, has ceased at the present
+day to be of much interest. It forms, perhaps, the
+true key to understand the special as opposed to
+general application of the maxims.
+
+Notwithstanding the assertion of Bayle, that "there
+are few people so bigoted to antiquity as not to prefer
+the Memoirs of La Rochefoucauld to the Commen-
+taries of Caesar," or the statement of Voltaire, "that
+the Memoirs are universally read and the Maxims are
+learnt by heart," few persons at the present day ever
+heard of the Memoirs, and the knowledge of most as
+to the Maxims is confined to that most celebrated of
+all, though omitted from his last edition, "There
+is something in the misfortunes of our best friends
+which does not wholly displease us." Yet it is
+difficult to assign a cause for this; no book is
+perhaps oftener unwittingly quoted, none certainly
+oftener unblushingly pillaged; upon none have so
+many contradictory opinions been given.
+
+"Few books," says Mr. Hallam, "have been more
+highly extolled, or more severely blamed, than the
+maxims of the Duke of Rochefoucauld, and that not
+only here, but also in France." Rousseau speaks of it
+as, "a sad and melancholy book," though he goes on
+to say "it is usually so in youth when we do not like
+seeing man as he is." Voltaire says of it, in the words
+above quoted, "One of the works which most contri-
+buted to form the taste of the (French) nation, and
+to give it a spirit of justness and precision, was the
+collection of the maxims of Francois Duc de la Roche-
+foucauld, though there is scarcely more than one
+truth running through the book--that 'self-love is the
+motive of everything'--yet this thought is presented
+under so many varied aspects that it is nearly always
+striking. It is not so much a book as it is materials
+for ornamenting a book. This little collection was
+read with avidity, it taught people to think, and to
+comprise their thoughts in a lively, precise, and delicate
+turn of expression. This was a merit which, before
+him, no one in Europe had attained since the revival
+of letters."
+
+Dr. Johnson speaks of it as "the only book written
+by a man of fashion, of which professed authors need
+be jealous."
+
+Lord Chesterfield, in his letters to his son, says,
+"Till you come to know mankind by your experience,
+I know no thing nor no man that can in the mean-
+time bring you so well acquainted with them as Le
+Duc de la Rochefoucauld. His little book of maxims,
+which I would advise you to look into for some
+moments at least every day of your life, is, I fear, too
+like and too exact a picture of human nature. I own
+it seems to degrade it, but yet my experience does not
+convince me that it degrades it unjustly."
+
+Bishop Butler, on the other hand, blames the book
+in no measured terms. "There is a strange affecta-
+tion," says the bishop, "in some people of explaining
+away all particular affection, and representing the
+whole life as nothing but one continued exercise
+of self-love. Hence arise that surprising confusion
+and perplexity in the Epicureans of old, Hobbes, the
+author of 'Reflexions Morales,' and the whole set
+of writers, of calling actions interested which are
+done of the most manifest known interest, merely for
+the gratification of a present passion."
+
+The judgment the reader will be most inclined to
+adopt will perhaps be either that of Mr. Hallam, "Con-
+cise and energetic in expression, reduced to those
+short aphorisms which leave much to the reader's
+acuteness and yet save his labour, not often obscure,
+and never wearisome, an evident generalisation of
+long experience, without pedantry, without method,
+without deductive reasonings, yet wearing an appear-
+ance at least of profundity; they delight the intelli-
+gent though indolent man of the world, and must be
+read with some admiration by the philosopher . . . .
+yet they bear witness to the contracted observation
+and the precipitate inferences which an intercourse
+with a single class of society scarcely fails to generate."
+Or that of Addison, who speaks of Rochefoucauld
+"as the great philosopher for administering consola-
+tion to the idle, the curious, and the worthless part of
+mankind."
+
+We are fortunately in possession of materials such
+as rarely exist to enable us to form a judgment of
+Rochefoucauld's character. We have, with a vanity
+that could only exist in a Frenchman, a description
+or portrait of himself, of his own painting, and one of
+those inimitable living sketches in which his great
+enemy, Cardinal De Retz, makes all the chief actors in
+the court of the regency of Anne of Austria pass
+across the stage before us.
+
+We will first look on the portrait Rochefoucauld has
+left us of himself: "I am," says he, "of a medium height,
+active, and well-proportioned. My complexion dark,
+but uniform, a high forehead; and of moderate height,
+black eyes, small, deep set, eyebrows black and thick
+but well placed. I am rather embarrassed in talking of
+my nose, for it is neither flat nor aquiline, nor large;
+nor pointed: but I believe, as far as I can say, it is too
+large than too small, and comes down just a trifle too
+low. I have a large mouth, lips generally red enough,
+neither shaped well nor badly. I have white teeth,
+and fairly even. I have been told I have a little too
+much chin. I have just looked at myself in the
+glass to ascertain the fact, and I do not know how to
+decide. As to the shape of my face, it is either
+square or oval, but which I should find it very diffi-
+cult to say. I have black hair, which curls by nature,
+and thick and long enough to entitle me to lay claim
+to a fine head. I have in my countenance somewhat
+of grief and pride, which gives many people an
+idea I despise them, although I am not at all given to
+do so. My gestures are very free, rather inclined to
+be too much so, for in speaking they make me use too
+much action. Such, candidly, I believe I am in out-
+ward appearance, and I believe it will be found that
+what I have said above of myself is not far from
+the real case. I shall use the same truthfulness in
+the remainder of my picture, for I have studied my-
+self sufficiently to know myself well; and I will lack
+neither boldness to speak as freely as I can of my
+good qualities, nor sincerity to freely avow that I
+have faults.
+
+"In the first place, to speak of my temper. I am
+melancholy, and I have hardly been seen for the last
+three or four years to laugh above three or four times.
+It seems to me that my melancholy would be even
+endurable and pleasant if I had none but what be-
+longed to me constitutionally; but it arises from so
+many other causes, fills my imagination in such a
+way, and possesses my mind so strongly that for the
+greater part of my time I remain without speaking a
+word, or give no meaning to what I say. I am ex-
+tremely reserved to those I do not know, and I am
+not very open with the greater part of those I do. It
+is a fault I know well, and I should neglect no means
+to correct myself of it; but as a certain gloomy air
+I have tends to make me seem more reserved than
+I am in fact, and as it is not in our power to rid
+ourselves of a bad expression that arises from a natu-
+ral conformation of features, I think that even when
+I have cured myself internally, externally some bad
+expression will always remain.
+
+"I have ability. I have no hesitation in saying it,
+as for what purpose should I pretend otherwise. So
+great circumvention, and so great depreciation, in
+speaking of the gifts one has, seems to me to hide a
+little vanity under an apparent modesty, and craftily
+to try to make others believe in greater virtues than
+are imputed to us. On my part I am content not to
+be considered better-looking than I am, nor of a bet-
+ter temper than I describe, nor more witty and clever
+than I am. Once more, I have ability, but a mind
+spoilt by melancholy, for though I know my own
+language tolerably well, and have a good memory, a
+mode of thought not particularly confused, I yet have
+so great a mixture of discontent that I often say what
+I have to say very badly.
+
+"The conversation of gentlemen is one of the plea-
+sures that most amuses me. I like it to be serious
+and morality to form the substance of it. Yet I
+also know how to enjoy it when trifling; and if I do
+not make many witty speeches, it is not because I do
+not appreciate the value of trifles well said, and that
+I do not find great amusement in that manner of rail-
+lery in which certain prompt and ready-witted per-
+sons excel so well. I write well in prose; I do well
+in verse; and if I was envious of the glory that
+springs from that quarter, I think with a little labour
+I could acquire some reputation. I like reading, in
+general; but that in which one finds something to
+polish the wit and strengthen the soul is what I like
+best. But, above all, I have the greatest pleasure in
+reading with an intelligent person, for then we reflect
+constantly upon what we read, and the observations
+we make form the most pleasant and useful form of
+conversation there is.
+
+"I am a fair critic of the works in verse and prose
+that are shown me; but perhaps I speak my opinion
+with almost too great freedom. Another fault in
+me is that I have sometimes a spirit of delicacy far
+too scrupulous, and a spirit of criticism far too severe.
+I do not dislike an argument, and I often of my own
+free will engage in one; but I generally back my
+opinion with too much warmth, and sometimes, when
+the wrong side is advocated against me, from the
+strength of my zeal for reason, I become a little un-
+reasonable myself.
+
+"I have virtuous sentiments, good inclinations, and
+so strong a desire to be a wholly good man that my
+friend cannot afford me a greater pleasure than can-
+didly to show me my faults. Those who know me
+most intimately, and those who have the goodness
+sometimes to give me the above advice, know that I
+always receive it with all the joy that could be ex-
+pected, and with all reverence of mind that could be
+desired.
+
+"I have all the passions pretty mildly, and pretty
+well under control. I am hardly ever seen in a rage,
+and I never hated any one. I am not, however, in-
+capable of avenging myself if I have been offended,
+or if my honour demanded I should resent an insult
+put upon me; on the contrary, I feel clear that duty
+would so well discharge the office of hatred in me
+that I should follow my revenge with even greater
+keenness than other people.
+
+"Ambition does not weary me. I fear but few
+things, and I do not fear death in the least. I am but
+little given to pity, and I could wish I was not so at
+all. Though there is nothing I would not do to com-
+fort an afflicted person, and I really believe that one
+should do all one can to show great sympathy to him
+for his misfortune, for miserable people are so foolish
+that this does them the greatest good in the world;
+yet I also hold that we should be content with ex-
+pressing sympathy, and carefully avoid having any.
+It is a passion that is wholly worthless in a well-regu-
+lated mind, which only serves to weaken the heart,
+and which should be left to ordinary persons, who, as
+they never do anything from reason, have need of
+passions to stimulate their actions.
+
+"I love my friends; and I love them to such an
+extent that I would not for a moment weigh my
+interest against theirs. I condescend to them, I
+patiently endure their bad temper. But, also, I do
+not make much of their caresses, and I do not feel
+great uneasiness in their absence.
+
+"Naturally, I have but little curiosity about the
+majority of things that stir up curiosity in other men.
+I am very secret, and I have less difficulty than most
+men in holding my tongue as to what is told me in
+confidence. I am most particular as to my word, and
+I would never fail, whatever might be the conse-
+quence, to do what I had promised; and I have made
+this an inflexible law during the whole of my life.
+
+"I keep the most punctilious civility to women. I
+do not believe I have ever said anything before them
+which could cause them annoyance. When their
+intellect is cultivated, I prefer their society to that of
+men: one there finds a mildness one does not meet
+with among ourselves, and it seems to me beyond this
+that they express themselves with more neatness, and
+give a more agreeable turn to the things they talk
+about. As for flirtation, I formerly indulged in a little,
+now I shall do so no more, though I am still young.
+I have renounced all flirtation, and I am simply
+astonished that there are still so many sensible people
+who can occupy their time with it.
+
+"I wholly approve of real loves; they indicate great-
+ness of soul, and although, in the uneasiness they give
+rise to, there is a something contrary to strict wisdom,
+they fit in so well with the most severe virtue, that I
+believe they cannot be censured with justice. To me
+who have known all that is fine and grand in the lofty
+aspirations of love, if I ever fall in love, it will as-
+suredly be in love of that nature. But in accordance
+with the present turn of my mind, I do not believe
+that the knowledge I have of it will ever change from
+my mind to my heart."
+
+Such is his own description of himself. Let us
+now turn to the other picture, delineated by the man
+who was his bitterest enemy, and whom (we say it
+with regret) Rochefoucauld tried to murder.
+
+Cardinal De Retz thus paints him:--
+"In M. de la Rochefoucauld there was ever an
+indescribable something. From his infancy he always
+wanted to be mixed up with plots, at a time when he
+could not understand even the smallest interests (which
+has indeed never been his weak point,) or comprehend
+greater ones, which in another sense has never been
+his strong point. He was never fitted for any matter,
+and I really cannot tell the reason. His glance was
+not sufficiently wide, and he could not take in at once
+all that lay in his sight, but his good sense, perfect in
+theories, combined with his gentleness, his winning
+ways, his pleasing manners, which are perfect, should
+more than compensate for his lack of penetration.
+He always had a natural irresoluteness, but I cannot
+say to what this irresolution is to be attributed. It
+could not arise in him from the wealth of his imagina-
+tion, for that was anything but lively. I cannot put
+it down to the barrenness of his judgment, for,
+although he was not prompt in action, he had a good
+store of reason. We see the effects of this irresolution,
+although we cannot assign a cause for it. He was
+never a general, though a great soldier; never, na-
+turally, a good courtier, although he had always a good
+idea of being so. He was never a good partizan,
+although all his life engaged in intrigues. That air
+of pride and timidity which your see in his private
+life, is turned in business into an apologetic manner.
+He always believed he had need of it; and this, com-
+bined with his 'Maxims,' which show little faith in
+virtue, and his habitual custom, to give up matters
+with the same haste he undertook them, leads
+me to the conclusion that he would have done far
+better to have known his own mind, and have passed
+himself off, as he could have done, for the most
+polished courtier, the most agreeable man in private
+life that had appeared in his century."
+
+It is but justice to the Cardinal to say, that the
+Duc is not painted in such dark colours as we should
+have expected, judging from what we know of the
+character of De Retz. With his marvellous power of
+depicting character, a power unrivalled, except by St.
+Simon and perhaps by Lord Clarendon, we should
+have expected the malignity of the priest would have
+stamped the features of his great enemy with the
+impress of infamy, and not have simply made him
+appear a courtier, weak, insincere, and nothing more.
+Though rather beyond our subject, the character of
+Cardinal de Retz, as delineated by Mdme. Sevigne, in
+one of her letters, will help us to form a true conclu-
+sion on the different characters of the Duc and the
+Cardinal. She says:--
+"Paul de Gondi Cardinal de Retz possesses great
+elevation of character, a certain extent of intellect, and
+more of the ostentation than of the true greatness of
+courage. He has an extraordinary memory, more
+energy than polish in his words, an easy humour,
+docility of character, and weakness in submitting to
+the complaints and reproaches of his friends, a little
+piety, some appearances of religion. He appears
+ambitious without being really so. Vanity and those
+who have guided him, have made him undertake great
+things, almost all opposed to his profession. He ex-
+cited the greatest troubles in the State without any
+design of turning them to account, and far from
+declaring himself the enemy of Cardinal Mazarin
+with any view of occupying his place, he thought of
+nothing but making himself an object of dread to
+him, and flattering himself with the false vanity of
+being his rival. He was clever enough, however, to
+take advantage of the public calamities to get himself
+made Cardinal. He endured his imprisonment with
+firmness, and owed his liberty solely to his own
+daring. In the obscurity of a life of wandering and
+concealment, his indolence for many years supported
+him with reputation. He preserved the Archbishopric
+of Paris against the power of Cardinal Mazarin, but
+after the death of that minister, he resigned it without
+knowing what he was doing, and without making use
+of the opportunity to promote the interests of him-
+self and his friends. He has taken part in several
+conclaves, and his conduct has always increased his
+reputation.
+
+"His natural bent is to indolence, nevertheless he
+labours with activity in pressing business, and reposes
+with indifference when it is concluded. He has great
+presence of mind, and knows so well how to turn it to
+his own advantage on all occasions presented him by
+fortune, that it would seem as if he had foreseen and
+desired them. He loves to narrate, and seeks to
+dazzle all his listeners indifferently by his extraor-
+dinary adventures, and his imagination often supplies
+him with more than his memory. The generality of
+his qualities are false, and what has most contributed
+to his reputation is his power of throwing a good light
+on his faults. He is insensible alike to hatred and to
+friendship, whatever pains he may be at to appear
+taken up with the one or the other. He is incapable
+of envy or avarice, whether from virtue or from care-
+lessness. He has borrowed more from his friends
+than a private person could ever hope to be able to
+repay; he has felt the vanity of acquiring so much on
+credit, and of undertaking to discharge it. He has
+neither taste nor refinement; he is amused by every-
+thing and pleased by nothing. He avoids difficult
+matters with considerable address, not allowing people
+to penetrate the slight acquaintance he has with every-
+thing. The retreat he has just made from the world
+is the most brilliant and the most unreal action of his
+life; it is a sacrifice he has made to his pride under
+the pretence of devotion; he quits the court to which
+he cannot attach himself, and retires from a world
+which is retiring from him."
+
+The Maxims were first published in 1665, with a
+preface by Segrais. This preface was omitted in the
+subsequent editions. The first edition contained
+316 maxims, counting the last upon death, which
+was not numbered. The second in 1666 contained
+only 102; the third in 1671, and the fourth in
+1675, 413. In this last edition we first meet with
+the introductory maxim, "Our virtues are gene-
+rally but disguised vices." The edition of 1678,
+the fifth, increased the number to 504. This was
+the last edition revised by the author, and pub-
+lished in his lifetime. The text of that edition has
+been used for the present translation. The next
+edition, the sixth, was published in 1693, about
+thirteen years after the author's death. This edition
+included fifty new maxims, attributed by the editor
+to Rochefoucauld. Most likely they were his writing,
+as the fact was never denied by his family, through
+whose permission they were published. They form
+the third supplement to the translation. This sixth
+edition was published by Claude Barbin, and the
+French editions since that time have been too nu-
+merous to be enumerated. The great popularity of
+the Maxims is perhaps best shown from the numerous
+translations that have been made of them. No less
+than eight English translations, or so-called transla-
+tions, have appeared; one American, a Swedish, and
+a Spanish translation, an Italian imitation, with
+parallel passages, and an English imitation by Hazlitt.
+The titles of the English editions are as follows:--
+i. Seneca Unmasked. By Mrs. Aphara Behn. Lon-
+ don, 1689. She calls the author the Duke of
+ Rushfucave.
+ii. Moral Maxims and Reflections, in four parts. By
+ the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Now made
+ English. London, 1694. 12 mo.
+iii. Moral Maxims and Reflections of the Duke de
+ la Rochefoucauld. Newly made English. Lon-
+ don, 1706. 12 mo.
+iv. Moral Maxims of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld.
+ Translated from the French. With notes. Lon-
+ don, 1749. 12 mo.
+v. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld. Revised and improved. London,
+ 1775. 8 vo.
+vi. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld. A new edition, revised and im-
+ proved, by L. D. London, 1781. 8 vo.
+vii. The Gentleman's Library. La Rochefoucauld's
+ Maxims and Moral Reflections. London, 1813.
+ 12 mo.
+viii.Moral Reflections, Sentences, and Maxims of
+ the Duke de la Rochefoucauld, newly translated
+ from the French; with an introduction and notes.
+ London, 1850. 16 mo.
+ix. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld: with a Memoir by the Chevalier
+ de Chatelain. London, 1868. 12 mo.
+
+The perusal of the Maxims will suggest to every
+reader to a greater or less degree, in accordance with
+the extent of his reading, parallel passages, and simi-
+lar ideas. Of ancient writers Rochefoucauld most
+strongly reminds us of Tacitus; of modern writers, Ju-
+nius most strongly reminds us of Rochefoucauld. Some
+examples from both are given in the notes to this trans-
+lation. It is curious to see how the expressions of the
+bitterest writer of English political satire to a great ex-
+tent express the same ideas as the great French satirist
+of private life. Had space permitted the parallel
+could have been drawn very closely, and much of the
+invective of Junius traced to its source in Rochefou-
+cauld.
+
+One of the persons whom Rochefoucauld patronised
+and protected, was the great French fabulist, La
+Fontaine. This patronage was repaid by La Fontaine
+giving, in one of his fables, "L'Homme et son Image,"
+an elaborate defence of his patron. After there depict-
+ing a man who fancied himself one of the most lovely
+in the world, and who complained he always found
+all mirrors untrustworthy, at last discovered his real
+image reflected in the water. He thus applies his
+fable:--
+"Je parle a tous: et cette erreur extreme,
+Est un mal que chacun se plait d'entretenir,
+Notre ame, c'est cet homme amoureux de lui meme,
+Tant de miroirs, ce sont les sottises d'autrui.
+Miroirs, de nos defauts les peintres legitimes,
+Et quant au canal, c'est celui
+Qui chacun sait, le livre des MAXIMES."
+
+It is just this: the book is a mirror in which we
+all see ourselves. This has made it so unpopular. It
+is too true. We dislike to be told of our faults,
+while we only like to be told of our neighbour's.
+Notwithstanding Rousseau's assertion, it is young
+men, who, before they know their own faults
+and only know their neighbours', that read and tho-
+roughly appreciate Rochefoucauld.
+
+After so many varied opinions he then pleases us more
+and seems far truer than he is in reality, it is impossible
+to give any general conclusion of such distinguished
+writers on the subject. Each reader will form his own
+opinion of the merits of the author and his book. To
+some, both will seem deserving of the highest praise; to
+others both will seem deserving of the highest censure.
+The truest judgment as to the author will be found in
+the remarks of a countryman of his own, as to the
+book in the remarks of a countryman of ours.
+
+As to the author, M. Sainte Beuve says:--"C'etait un
+misanthrope poli, insinuant, souriant, qui precedait
+de bien peu et preparait avec charme l'autre MISAN-
+THROPE."
+
+As to the book, Mr. Hallam says:--"Among the
+books in ancient and modern times which record the
+conclusions of observing men on the moral qualities
+of their fellows, a high place should be reserved for
+the Maxims of Rochefoucauld".
+
+
+
+REFLECTIONS; OR, SENTENCES AND MORAL MAXIMS
+
+
+Our virtues are most frequently but vices disguised.
+
+[This epigraph which is the key to the system
+of La Rochefoucauld, is found in another form
+as No. 179 of the maxims of the first edition, 1665, it is
+omitted from the 2nd and 3rd, and reappears for the first
+time in the 4th edition, in 1675, as at present, at the head
+of the Reflections.--AIME MARTIN. Its best answer is ar-
+rived at by reversing the predicate and the subject, and
+you at once form a contradictory maxim equally true, our
+vices are most frequently but virtues disguised.]
+
+1.--What we term virtue is often but a mass of
+various actions and divers interests, which fortune, or
+our own industry, manage to arrange; and it is not
+always from valour or from chastity that men are
+brave, and women chaste.
+
+"Who combats bravely is not therefore brave,
+He dreads a death-bed like the meanest slave;
+Who reasons wisely is not therefore wise,
+His pride in reasoning, not in acting, lies."
+ Pope, MORAL ESSAYS, Ep. i. line 115.
+
+2.--Self-love is the greatest of flatterers.
+
+3.--Whatever discoveries have been made in the
+region of self-love, there remain many unexplored ter-
+ritories there.
+
+[This is the first hint of the system the author tries to
+develope. He wishes to find in vice a motive for all our
+actions, but this does not suffice him; he is obliged to call
+other passions to the help of his system and to confound
+pride, vanity, interest and egotism with self love. This
+confusion destroys the unity of his principle.--AIME
+MARTIN.]
+
+4.--Self love is more cunning than the most cunning
+man in the world.
+
+5.--The duration of our passions is no more de-
+pendant upon us than the duration of our life.
+[Then what becomes of free will?--AIME MARTIN]
+
+6.--Passion often renders the most clever man a
+fool, and even sometimes renders the most foolish man
+clever.
+
+7.--Great and striking actions which dazzle the
+eyes are represented by politicians as the effect of
+great designs, instead of which they are commonly
+caused by the temper and the passions. Thus the war
+between Augustus and Anthony, which is set down to
+the ambition they entertained of making themselves
+masters of the world, was probably but an effect of
+jealousy.
+
+8.--The passions are the only advocates which
+always persuade. They are a natural art, the rules
+of which are infallible; and the simplest man with
+passion will be more persuasive than the most eloquent
+without.
+
+[See Maxim 249 which is an illustration of this.]
+
+9.--The passions possess a certain injustice and
+self interest which makes it dangerous to follow them,
+and in reality we should distrust them even when
+they appear most trustworthy.
+
+10.--In the human heart there is a perpetual gene-
+ration of passions; so that the ruin of one is almost
+always the foundation of another.
+
+11.--Passions often produce their contraries: ava-
+rice sometimes leads to prodigality, and prodigality to
+avarice; we are often obstinate through weakness
+and daring though timidity.
+
+12.--Whatever care we take to conceal our pas-
+sions under the appearances of piety and honour, they
+are always to be seen through these veils.
+
+[The 1st edition, 1665, preserves the image perhaps
+better--"however we may conceal our passions under the
+veil, etc., there is always some place where they peep out."]
+
+13.--Our self love endures more impatiently the
+condemnation of our tastes than of our opinions.
+
+14.--Men are not only prone to forget benefits and
+injuries; they even hate those who have obliged them,
+and cease to hate those who have injured them. The
+necessity of revenging an injury or of recompensing
+a benefit seems a slavery to which they are unwilling
+to submit.
+
+15.--The clemency of Princes is often but policy
+to win the affections of the people.
+
+["So many are the advantages which monarchs gain by
+clemency, so greatly does it raise their fame and endear
+them to their subjects, that it is generally happy for them
+to have an opportunity of displaying it."--Montesquieu,
+ESPRIT DES LOIS, LIB. VI., C. 21.]
+
+16.--This clemency of which they make a merit,
+arises oftentimes from vanity, sometimes from idle-
+ness, oftentimes from fear, and almost always from all
+three combined.
+
+[La Rochefoucauld is content to paint the age in which
+he lived. Here the clemency spoken of is nothing more
+than an expression of the policy of Anne of Austria.
+Rochefoucauld had sacrificed all to her; even the favour
+of Cardinal Richelieu, but when she became regent she be-
+stowed her favours upon those she hated; her friends were
+forgotten.--AIME MARTIN. The reader will hereby see
+that the age in which the writer lived best interprets his
+maxims.]
+
+17.--The moderation of those who are happy arises
+from the calm which good fortune bestows upon their
+temper.
+
+18.--Moderation is caused by the fear of exciting
+the envy and contempt which those merit who are
+intoxicated with their good fortune; it is a vain dis-
+play of our strength of mind, and in short the mo-
+deration of men at their greatest height is only a
+desire to appear greater than their fortune.
+
+19.--We have all sufficient strength to support the
+misfortunes of others.
+
+[The strongest example of this is the passage in Lucre-
+tius, lib. ii., line I:--
+ "Suave mari magno turbantibus aequora ventis
+ E terra magnum alterius spectare laborem."]
+
+20.--The constancy of the wise is only the talent of
+concealing the agitation of their hearts.
+
+[Thus wisdom is only hypocrisy, says a commentator.
+This definition of constancy is a result of maxim 18.]
+
+21.--Those who are condemned to death affect some-
+times a constancy and contempt for death which is
+only the fear of facing it; so that one may say that
+this constancy and contempt are to their mind what
+the bandage is to their eyes.
+
+[See this thought elaborated in maxim 504.]
+
+22.--Philosophy triumphs easily over past evils and
+future evils; but present evils triumph over it.
+
+23.--Few people know death, we only endure it,
+usually from determination, and even from stupidity
+and custom; and most men only die because they
+know not how to prevent dying.
+
+24.--When great men permit themselves to be cast
+down by the continuance of misfortune, they show
+us that they were only sustained by ambition, and not
+by their mind; so that PLUS a great vanity, heroes
+are made like other men.
+
+[Both these maxims have been rewritten and made
+conciser by the author; the variations are not worth
+quoting.]
+
+25.--We need greater virtues to sustain good than
+evil fortune.
+
+["Prosperity do{th} best discover vice, but adversity do{th}
+best discover virtue."--Lord Bacon, ESSAYS{, (1625), "Of
+Adversity"}.]
+
+{The quotation wrongly had "does" for "doth".}
+
+26.--Neither the sun nor death can be looked at
+without winking.
+
+27.--People are often vain of their passions, even
+of the worst, but envy is a passion so timid and
+shame-faced that no one ever dare avow her.
+
+28.--Jealousy is in a manner just and reasonable,
+as it tends to preserve a good which belongs, or
+which we believe belongs to us, on the other hand
+envy is a fury which cannot endure the happiness of
+others.
+
+29.--The evil that we do does not attract to us so
+much persecution and hatred as our good qualities.
+
+30.--We have more strength than will; and it is
+often merely for an excuse we say things are impos-
+sible.
+
+31.--If we had no faults we should not take so much
+pleasure in noting those of others.
+
+32.--Jealousy lives upon doubt; and comes to an
+end or becomes a fury as soon as it passes from
+doubt to certainty.
+
+33.--Pride indemnifies itself and loses nothing even
+when it casts away vanity.
+
+[See maxim 450, where the author states, what we take
+from our other faults we add to our pride.]
+
+34.--If we had no pride we should not complain of
+that of others.
+
+["The proud are ever most provoked by pride."-Cow-
+per, CONVERSATION 160.]
+
+35.--Pride is much the same in all men, the only
+difference is the method and manner of showing it.
+
+["Pride bestowed on all a common friend."--Pope,
+ESSAY ON MAN, Ep. ii., line 273.]
+
+36.--It would seem that nature, which has so wisely
+ordered the organs of our body for our happiness, has
+also given us pride to spare us the mortification of
+knowing our imperfections.
+
+37.--Pride has a larger part than goodness in our
+remonstrances with those who commit faults, and we
+reprove them not so much to correct as to persuade
+them that we ourselves are free from faults.
+
+38.--We promise according to our hopes; we per-
+form according to our fears.
+
+["The reason why the Cardinal (Mazarin) deferred so long
+to grant the favours he had promised, was because he was
+persuaded that hope was much more capable of keeping
+men to their duty than gratitude."--FRAGMENTS HISTORIQUES.
+RACINE.]
+
+39.--Interest speaks all sorts of tongues and plays
+all sorts of characters; even that of disinterestedness.
+
+40.--Interest blinds some and makes some see.
+
+41.--Those who apply themselves too closely to
+little things often become incapable of great things.
+
+42.--We have not enough strength to follow all our
+reason.
+
+43.--A man often believes himself leader when he
+is led; as his mind endeavours to reach one goal, his
+heart insensibly drags him towards another.
+
+
+44.--Strength and weakness of mind are mis-named;
+they are really only the good or happy arrangement of
+our bodily organs.
+
+45.--The caprice of our temper is even more whim-
+sical than that of Fortune.
+
+46.--The attachment or indifference which philoso-
+phers have shown to life is only the style of their self
+love, about which we can no more dispute than of that
+of the palate or of the choice of colours.
+
+47.--Our temper sets a price upon every gift that
+we receive from fortune.
+
+48.--Happiness is in the taste, and not in the things
+themselves; we are happy from possessing what we
+like, not from possessing what others like.
+
+49.--We are never so happy or so unhappy as we
+suppose.
+
+50.--Those who think they have merit persuade
+themselves that they are honoured by being unhappy,
+in order to persuade others and themselves that they
+are worthy to be the butt of fortune.
+
+["Ambition has been so strong as to make very miserable
+men take comfort that they were supreme in misery; and
+certain it is{, that where} we cannot distinguish ourselves by some-
+thing excellent, we begin to take a complacency in some
+singular infirmities, follies, or defects of one kind or other."
+--Burke, {ON THE SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL, (1756), Part I, Sect. XVII}.]
+
+{The translators' incorrectly cite SPEECH ON CONCILIATION WITH
+AMERICA. Also, Burke does not actually write "Ambition has been...",
+he writes "It has been..." when speaking of ambition.}
+
+51.--Nothing should so much diminish the satisfac-
+tion which we feel with ourselves as seeing that we
+disapprove at one time of that which we approve of
+at another.
+
+52.--Whatever difference there appears in our for-
+tunes, there is nevertheless a certain compensation of
+good and evil which renders them equal.
+
+53.--Whatever great advantages nature may give,
+it is not she alone, but fortune also that makes the
+hero.
+
+54.--The contempt of riches in philosophers was
+only a hidden desire to avenge their merit upon the
+injustice of fortune, by despising the very goods of
+which fortune had deprived them; it was a secret to
+guard themselves against the degradation of poverty,
+it was a back way by which to arrive at that distinc-
+tion which they could not gain by riches.
+
+["It is always easy as well as agreeable for the inferior
+ranks of mankind to claim merit from the contempt of that
+pomp and pleasure which fortune has placed beyond their
+reach. The virtue of the primitive Christians, like that of
+the first Romans, was very frequently guarded by poverty
+and ignorance."--Gibbon, DECLINE AND FALL, CHAP. 15.]
+
+55.--The hate of favourites is only a love of favour.
+The envy of NOT possessing it, consoles and softens its
+regrets by the contempt it evinces for those who pos-
+sess it, and we refuse them our homage, not being able
+to detract from them what attracts that of the rest of
+the world.
+
+56.--To establish ourselves in the world we do
+everything to appear as if we were established.
+
+57.--Although men flatter themselves with their
+great actions, they are not so often the result of a
+great design as of chance.
+
+58.--It would seem that our actions have lucky or
+unlucky stars to which they owe a great part of the
+blame or praise which is given them.
+
+59.--There are no accidents so unfortunate from
+which skilful men will not draw some advantage, nor
+so fortunate that foolish men will not turn them to
+their hurt.
+
+60.--Fortune turns all things to the advantage of
+those on whom she smiles.
+
+61.--The happiness or unhappiness of men depends
+no less upon their dispositions than their fortunes.
+
+["Still to ourselves in every place consigned
+ Our own felicity we make or find."
+ Goldsmith, TRAVELLER, 431.]
+
+62.--Sincerity is an openness of heart; we find it in
+very few people; what we usually see is only an artful
+dissimulation to win the confidence of others.
+
+63.--The aversion to lying is often a hidden ambi-
+tion to render our words credible and weighty, and
+to attach a religious aspect to our conversation.
+
+64.--Truth does not do as much good in the world,
+as its counterfeits do evil.
+
+65.--There is no praise we have not lavished upon
+Prudence; and yet she cannot assure to us the most
+trifling event.
+
+[The author corrected this maxim several times, in 1665
+it is No. 75; 1666, No. 66; 1671-5, No. 65; in the last
+edition it stands as at present. In the first he quotes
+Juvenal, Sat. X., line 315.
+ " Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia, nos te;
+ Nos facimus, Fortuna, deam, coeloque locamus."
+Applying to Prudence what Juvenal does to Fortune, and
+with much greater force.]
+
+66.--A clever man ought to so regulate his interests
+that each will fall in due order. Our greediness so
+often troubles us, making us run after so many things
+at the same time, that while we too eagerly look after
+the least we miss the greatest.
+
+67.--What grace is to the body good sense is to the
+mind.
+
+68.--It is difficult to define love; all we can say is,
+that in the soul it is a desire to rule, in the mind it is
+a sympathy, and in the body it is a hidden and deli-
+cate wish to possess what we love--PLUS many
+mysteries.
+
+["Love is the love of one {singularly,} with desire to be
+singularly beloved."--Hobbes{, LEVIATHAN, (1651), Part I,
+Chapter VI}.]
+
+{Two notes about this quotation: (1) the translators' mistakenly
+have "singularity" for the first "singularly" and (2) Hobbes does
+not actually write "Love is the..."--he writes "Love of one..."
+under the heading "The passion of Love."}
+
+69.--If there is a pure love, exempt from the mix-
+ture of our other passions, it is that which is concealed
+at the bottom of the heart and of which even our-
+selves are ignorant.
+
+70.--There is no disguise which can long hide love
+where it exists, nor feign it where it does not.
+
+71.--There are few people who would not be
+ashamed of being beloved when they love no longer.
+
+72.--If we judge of love by the majority of its
+results it rather resembles hatred than friendship.
+
+73.--We may find women who have never indulged
+in an intrigue, but it is rare to find those who have
+intrigued but once.
+
+["Yet there are some, they say, who have had {NONE};
+But those who have, ne'er end with only {ONE}."
+ {--Lord Byron, }DON JUAN, {Canto} iii., stanza 4.]
+
+74.--There is only one sort of love, but there are a
+thousand different copies.
+
+75.--Neither love nor fire can subsist without per-
+petual motion; both cease to live so soon as they cease
+to hope, or to fear.
+
+[So Lord Byron{, STANZAS, (1819), stanza 3} says of Love--
+ "Like chiefs of faction,
+ His life is action."]
+
+76.--There is real love just as there are real ghosts;
+every person speaks of it, few persons have seen it.
+
+["Oh Love! no habitant of earth thou art--
+ An unseen seraph, we believe in thee--
+ A faith whose martyrs are the broken heart,--
+ But never yet hath seen, nor e'er shall see
+ The naked eye, thy form as it should be."
+ {--Lord Byron, }CHILDE HAROLD, {Canto} iv., stanza 121.]
+
+77.--Love lends its name to an infinite number of
+engagements (COMMERCES) which are attributed to it,
+but with which it has no more concern than the Doge
+has with all that is done in Venice.
+
+78.--The love of justice is simply in the majority of
+men the fear of suffering injustice.
+
+79.--Silence is the best resolve for him who distrusts
+himself.
+
+80.--What renders us so changeable in our friend-
+ship is, that it is difficult to know the qualities of the
+soul, but easy to know those of the mind.
+
+81.--We can love nothing but what agrees with us,
+and we can only follow our taste or our pleasure when
+we prefer our friends to ourselves; nevertheless it is
+only by that preference that friendship can be true
+and perfect.
+
+82.--Reconciliation with our enemies is but a desire
+to better our condition, a weariness of war, the fear
+of some unlucky accident.
+
+["Thus terminated that famous war of the Fronde. * *
+The Duke de la Rochefoucauld desired peace because of
+his dangerous wounds and ruined castles, which had made
+him dread even worse events. On the other side the
+Queen, who had shown herself so ungrateful to her too
+ambitious friends, did not cease to feel the bitterness of
+their resentment. 'I wish,' said she, 'it were always
+night, because daylight shows me so many who have
+betrayed me.'"--MEMOIRES DE MADAME DE MOTTEVILLE, TOM.
+IV., p. 60. Another proof that although these maxims
+are in some cases of universal application, they were based
+entirely on the experience of the age in which the author
+lived.]
+
+83.--What men term friendship is merely a partner-
+ship with a collection of reciprocal interests, and an
+exchange of favours--in fact it is but a trade in which
+self love always expects to gain something.
+
+84.--It is more disgraceful to distrust than to be
+deceived by our friends.
+
+85.--We often persuade ourselves to love people
+who are more powerful than we are, yet interest alone
+produces our friendship; we do not give our hearts
+away for the good we wish to do, but for that we ex-
+pect to receive.
+
+86.--Our distrust of another justifies his deceit.
+
+87.--Men would not live long in society were they
+not the dupes of each other.
+
+[A maxim, adds Aime Martin, "Which may enter into
+the code of a vulgar rogue, but one is astonished to find
+it in a moral treatise." Yet we have scriptural authority
+for it: "Deceiving and being deceived."--2 TIM. iii. 13.]
+
+88.--Self love increases or diminishes for us the
+good qualities of our friends, in proportion to the
+satisfaction we feel with them, and we judge of their
+merit by the manner in which they act towards us.
+
+89.--Everyone blames his memory, no one blames
+his judgment.
+
+90.--In the intercourse of life, we please more by
+our faults than by our good qualities.
+
+91.--The largest ambition has the least appearance
+of ambition when it meets with an absolute impossi-
+bility in compassing its object.
+
+92.--To awaken a man who is deceived as to his
+own merit is to do him as bad a turn as that done
+to the Athenian madman who was happy in believing
+that all the ships touching at the port belonged to him.
+
+[That is, they cured him. The madman was Thrasyllus,
+son of Pythodorus. His brother Crito cured him, when
+he infinitely regretted the time of his more pleasant mad-
+ness.--See Aelian, VAR. HIST. iv. 25. So Horace--
+ -------------"Pol, me occidistis, amici,
+ Non servastis," ait, "cui sic extorta voluptas
+ Et demptus per vim mentis gratissimus error."
+ HOR. EP. ii--2, 138,
+of the madman who was cured of a pleasant lunacy.]
+
+93.--Old men delight in giving good advice as a
+consolation for the fact that they can no longer set
+bad examples.
+
+94.--Great names degrade instead of elevating those
+who know not how to sustain them.
+
+95.--The test of extraordinary merit is to see those
+who envy it the most yet obliged to praise it.
+
+96.--A man is perhaps ungrateful, but often less
+chargeable with ingratitude than his benefactor is.
+
+97.--We are deceived if we think that mind and
+judgment are two different matters: judgment is but
+the extent of the light of the mind. This light pene-
+trates to the bottom of matters; it remarks all that
+can be remarked, and perceives what appears imper-
+ceptible. Therefore we must agree that it is the ex-
+tent of the light in the mind that produces all the
+effects which we attribute to judgment.
+
+98.--Everyone praises his heart, none dare praise
+their understanding.
+
+99.--Politeness of mind consists in thinking chaste
+and refined thoughts.
+
+100.--Gallantry of mind is saying the most empty
+things in an agreeable manner.
+
+101.--Ideas often flash across our minds more com-
+plete than we could make them after much labour.
+
+102.--The head is ever the dupe of the heart.
+
+[A feeble imitation of that great thought "All folly
+comes from the heart."--AIME MARTIN. But Bonhome, in his
+L'ART DE PENSER, says "Plusieurs diraient en periode quarre
+que quelques reflexions que fasse l'esprit et quelques resolu-
+tions qu'il prenne pour corriger ses travers le premier sen-
+timent du coeur renverse tous ses projets. Mais il n'appar-
+tient qu'a M. de la Rochefoucauld de dire tout en un mot
+que l'esprit est toujours la dupe du coeur."]
+
+103.--Those who know their minds do not neces-
+sarily know their hearts.
+
+104.--Men and things have each their proper per-
+spective; to judge rightly of some it is necessary to
+see them near, of others we can never judge rightly
+but at a distance.
+
+105.--A man for whom accident discovers sense, is
+not a rational being. A man only is so who under-
+stands, who distinguishes, who tests it.
+
+106.--To understand matters rightly we should
+understand their details, and as that knowledge is
+almost infinite, our knowledge is always superficial
+and imperfect.
+
+107.--One kind of flirtation is to boast we never
+flirt.
+
+108.--The head cannot long play the part of the
+heart.
+
+109.--Youth changes its tastes by the warmth of its
+blood, age retains its tastes by habit.
+
+110.--Nothing is given so profusely as advice.
+
+111.--The more we love a woman the more prone
+we are to hate her.
+
+112.--The blemishes of the mind, like those of the
+face, increase by age.
+
+113.--There may be good but there are no pleasant
+marriages.
+
+114.--We are inconsolable at being deceived by our
+enemies and betrayed by our friends, yet still we are
+often content to be thus served by ourselves.
+
+115.--It is as easy unwittingly to deceive oneself as
+to deceive others.
+
+116.--Nothing is less sincere than the way of asking
+and giving advice. The person asking seems to pay
+deference to the opinion of his friend, while thinking
+in reality of making his friend approve his opinion
+and be responsible for his conduct. The person
+giving the advice returns the confidence placed in him
+by eager and disinterested zeal, in doing which he is
+usually guided only by his own interest or reputation.
+
+["I have often thought how ill-natured a maxim it was
+which on many occasions I have heard from people of
+good understanding, 'That as to what related to private
+conduct no one was ever the better for advice.' But upon
+further examination I have resolved with myself that the
+maxim might be admitted without any violent prejudice
+to mankind. For in the manner advice was generally given
+there was no reason I thought to wonder it should be so
+ill received, something there was which strangely inverted
+the case, and made the giver to be the only gainer. For
+by what I could observe in many occurrences of our lives,
+that which we called giving advice was properly taking an
+occasion to show our own wisdom at another's expense.
+On the other side to be instructed or to receive advice on
+the terms usually prescribed to us was little better than
+tamely to afford another the occasion of raising himself a
+character from our defects."--Lord Shaftesbury, CHARAC-
+TERISTICS, i., 153.]
+
+117.--The most subtle of our acts is to simulate
+blindness for snares that we know are set for us. We
+are never so easily deceived as when trying to deceive.
+
+118.--The intention of never deceiving often exposes
+us to deception.
+
+119.--We become so accustomed to disguise ourselves
+to others that at last we are disguised to ourselves.
+
+["Those who quit their proper character{,} to assume what
+does not belong to them, are{,} for the greater part{,} ignorant
+both of the character they leave{,} and of the character they
+assume."--Burke, {REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION IN FRANCE, (1790),
+Paragraph 19}.]
+
+{The translators' incorrectly cite THOUGHTS ON THE CAUSE
+OF THE PRESENT DISCONTENTS.}
+
+120.--We often act treacherously more from weak-
+ness than from a fixed motive.
+
+121.--We frequently do good to enable us with
+impunity to do evil.
+
+122.--If we conquer our passions it is more from
+their weakness than from our strength.
+
+123.--If we never flattered ourselves we should have
+but scant pleasure.
+
+124.--The most deceitful persons spend their lives
+in blaming deceit, so as to use it on some great occa-
+sion to promote some great interest.
+
+125.--The daily employment of cunning marks a
+little mind, it generally happens that those who resort
+to it in one respect to protect themselves lay them-
+selves open to attack in another.
+
+["With that low cunning which in fools supplies,
+ And amply, too, the place of being wise."
+ Churchill, ROSCIAD, 117.]
+
+126.--Cunning and treachery are the offspring of
+incapacity.
+
+127.--The true way to be deceived is to think one-
+self more knowing than others.
+
+128.--Too great cleverness is but deceptive delicacy,
+true delicacy is the most substantial cleverness.
+
+129.--It is sometimes necessary to play the fool to
+avoid being deceived by cunning men.
+
+130.--Weakness is the only fault which cannot be
+cured.
+
+131.--The smallest fault of women who give them-
+selves up to love is to love.
+ [------"Faciunt graviora coactae
+ Imperio sexus minimumque libidine peccant."
+ Juvenal, SAT. vi., 134.]
+
+132.--It is far easier to be wise for others than to
+be so for oneself.
+
+[Hence the proverb, "A man who is his own lawyer
+has a fool for his client."]
+
+133.--The only good examples are those, that make
+us see the absurdity of bad originals.
+
+134.--We are never so ridiculous from the habits we
+have as from those that we affect to have.
+
+135.--We sometimes differ more widely from our-
+selves than we do from others.
+
+136.--There are some who never would have loved
+if they never had heard it spoken of.
+
+137.--When not prompted by vanity we say little.
+
+138.--A man would rather say evil of himself than
+say nothing.
+
+["Montaigne's vanity led him to talk perpetually of
+himself, and as often happens to vain men, he would rather
+talk of his own failings than of any foreign subject."--
+Hallam, LITERATURE OF EUROPE.]
+
+139.--One of the reasons that we find so few
+persons rational and agreeable in conversation is
+there is hardly a person who does not think more of
+what he wants to say than of his answer to what is
+said. The most clever and polite are content with
+only seeming attentive while we perceive in their
+mind and eyes that at the very time they are wander-
+ing from what is said and desire to return to what they
+want to say. Instead of considering that the worst
+way to persuade or please others is to try thus strongly
+to please ourselves, and that to listen well and to
+answer well are some of the greatest charms we can
+have in conversation.
+
+["An absent man can make but few observations, he can
+pursue nothing steadily because his absences make him
+lose his way. They are very disagreeable and hardly to be
+tolerated in old age, but in youth they cannot be forgiven."
+--Lord Chesterfield, LETTER 195.]
+
+140.--If it was not for the company of fools, a witty
+man would often be greatly at a loss.
+
+141.--We often boast that we are never bored, but
+yet we are so conceited that we do not perceive how
+often we bore others.
+
+142.--As it is the mark of great minds to say many
+things in a few words, so it is that of little minds to
+use many words to say nothing.
+
+["So much they talked, so very little said."
+ Churchill, ROSCIAD, 550.
+
+"Men who are unequal to the labour of discussing an ar-
+gument or wish to avoid it, are willing enough to suppose
+that much has been proved because much has been said."--
+ Junius, JAN. 1769.]
+
+143.--It is oftener by the estimation of our own
+feelings that we exaggerate the good qualities of others
+than by their merit, and when we praise them we wish
+to attract their praise.
+
+144.--We do not like to praise, and we never praise
+without a motive. Praise is flattery, artful, hidden,
+delicate, which gratifies differently him who praises
+and him who is praised. The one takes it as the re-
+ward of merit, the other bestows it to show his im-
+partiality and knowledge.
+
+145.--We often select envenomed praise which, by
+a reaction upon those we praise, shows faults we could
+not have shown by other means.
+
+146.--Usually we only praise to be praised.
+
+147.--Few are sufficiently wise to prefer censure
+which is useful to praise which is treacherous.
+
+148.--Some reproaches praise; some praises re-
+proach.
+
+["Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer,
+ And, without sneering, teach the rest to sneer."
+ Pope {ESSAY ON MAN, (1733), EPISTLE TO DR. ARBUTHNOT.}]
+
+149.--The refusal of praise is only the wish to be
+praised twice.
+
+[The modesty which pretends to refuse praise is but in
+truth a desire to be praised more highly. EDITION 1665.]
+
+150.--The desire which urges us to deserve praise
+strengthens our good qualities, and praise given to
+wit, valour, and beauty, tends to increase them.
+
+151.--It is easier to govern others than to prevent
+being governed.
+
+152.--If we never flattered ourselves the flattery of
+others would not hurt us.
+
+["Adulatione servilia fingebant securi de fragilitate cre-
+dentis." Tacit. Ann. xvi.]
+
+153.--Nature makes merit but fortune sets it to
+work.
+
+154.--Fortune cures us of many faults that reason
+could not.
+
+155.--There are some persons who only disgust with
+their abilities, there are persons who please even with
+their faults.
+
+156.--There are persons whose only merit consists
+in saying and doing stupid things at the right time,
+and who ruin all if they change their manners.
+
+157.--The fame of great men ought always to be
+estimated by the means used to acquire it.
+
+158.--Flattery is base coin to which only our vanity
+gives currency.
+
+159.--It is not enough to have great qualities, we
+should also have the management of them.
+
+160.--However brilliant an action it should not be
+esteemed great unless the result of a great motive.
+
+161.--A certain harmony should be kept between
+actions and ideas if we desire to estimate the effects
+that they produce.
+
+162.--The art of using moderate abilities to advan-
+tage wins praise, and often acquires more reputation
+than real brilliancy.
+
+163.--Numberless arts appear foolish whose secre{t}
+motives are most wise and weighty.
+
+164.--It is much easier to seem fitted for posts we
+do not fill than for those we do.
+
+165.--Ability wins us the esteem of the true men,
+luck that of the people.
+
+166.--The world oftener rewards the appearance of
+merit than merit itself.
+
+167.--Avarice is more opposed to economy than to
+liberality.
+
+168.--However deceitful hope may be, yet she
+carries us on pleasantly to the end of life.
+
+["Hope travels through, nor quits us when we die."
+ Pope: ESSAY ON MAN, Ep. ii.]
+
+169.--Idleness and fear keeps us in the path of duty,
+but our virtue often gets the praise.
+
+["Quod segnitia erat sapientia vocaretur."
+ Tacitus Hist. I.]
+
+170.--If one acts rightly and honestly, it is difficult
+to decide whether it is the effect of integrity or skill.
+
+171.--As rivers are lost in the sea so are virtues in
+self.
+
+172.--If we thoroughly consider the varied effects
+of indifference we find we miscarry more in our duties
+than in our interests.
+
+173.--There are different kinds of curiosity: one
+springs from interest, which makes us desire to know
+everything that may be profitable to us; another from
+pride, which springs from a desire of knowing what
+others are ignorant of.
+
+174.--It is far better to accustom our mind to bear
+the ills we have than to speculate on those which may
+befall us.
+
+ ["Rather bear th{ose} ills we have
+ Than fly to others that we know not of."
+ {--Shakespeare, HAMLET, Act III, Scene I, Hamlet.}]
+
+175.--Constancy in love is a perpetual inconstancy
+which causes our heart to attach itself to all the quali-
+ties of the person we love in succession, sometimes
+giving the preference to one, sometimes to another.
+This constancy is merely inconstancy fixed, and limited
+to the same person.
+
+176.--There are two kinds of constancy in love, one
+arising from incessantly finding in the loved one fresh
+objects to love, the other from regarding it as a point
+of honour to be constant.
+
+177.--Perseverance is not deserving of blame or
+praise, as it is merely the continuance of tastes and
+feelings which we can neither create or destroy.
+
+178.--What makes us like new studies is not so
+much the weariness we have of the old or the wish
+for change as the desire to be admired by those who
+know more than ourselves, and the hope of advantage
+over those who know less.
+
+179.--We sometimes complain of the levity of our
+friends to justify our own by anticipation.
+
+180.--Our repentance is not so much sorrow for the
+ill we have done as fear of the ill that may happen to
+us.
+
+181.--One sort of inconstancy springs from levity or
+weakness of mind, and makes us accept everyone's
+opinion, and another more excusable comes from a
+surfeit of matter.
+
+182.--Vices enter into the composition of virtues as
+poison into that of medicines. Prudence collects and
+blends the two and renders them useful against the ills
+of life.
+
+183.--For the credit of virtue we must admit that
+the greatest misfortunes of men are those into which
+they fall through their crimes.
+
+184.--We admit our faults to repair by our sincerity
+the evil we have done in the opinion of others.
+
+[In the edition of 1665 this maxim stands as No. 200.
+We never admit our faults except through vanity.]
+
+185.--There are both heroes of evil and heroes of
+good.
+
+[Ut alios industria ita hunc ignavia protulerat ad famam,
+habebaturque non ganeo et profligator sed erudito luxu.
+--Tacit. Ann. xvi.]
+
+186.--We do not despise all who have vices, but we
+do despise all who have not virtues.
+
+["If individuals have no virtues their vices may be of
+use to us."--JUNIUS, 5th Oct. 1771.]
+
+187.--The name of virtue is as useful to our interest
+as that of vice.
+
+188.--The health of the mind is not less uncertain
+than that of the body, and when passions seem
+furthest removed we are no less in danger of infec-
+tion than of falling ill when we are well.
+
+189.--It seems that nature has at man's birth fixed
+the bounds of his virtues and vices.
+
+190.--Great men should not have great faults.
+
+191.--We may say vices wait on us in the course of
+our life as the landlords with whom we successively
+lodge, and if we travelled the road twice over I
+doubt if our experience would make us avoid them.
+
+192.--When our vices leave us we flatter ourselves
+with the idea we have left them.
+
+193.--There are relapses in the diseases of the mind
+as in those of the body; what we call a cure is often
+no more than an intermission or change of disease.
+
+194.--The defects of the mind are like the wounds
+of the body. Whatever care we take to heal them
+the scars ever remain, and there is always danger of
+their reopening.
+
+195.--The reason which often prevents us abandon-
+ing a single vice is having so many.
+
+196.--We easily forget those faults which are known
+only to ourselves.
+
+[Seneca says "Innocentem quisque se dicit respiciens
+testem non conscientiam."]
+
+197.--There are men of whom we can never believe
+evil without having seen it. Yet there are very few
+in whom we should be surprised to see it.
+
+198.--We exaggerate the glory of some men to
+detract from that of others, and we should praise
+Prince Conde and Marshal Turenne much less if we
+did not want to blame them both.
+
+[The allusion to Conde and Turenne gives the date at
+which these maxims were published in 1665. Conde and
+Turenne were after their campaign with the Imperialists
+at the height of their fame. It proves the truth of the
+remark of Tacitus, "Populus neminem sine aemulo sinit."--
+Tac. Ann. xiv.]
+
+199.--The desire to appear clever often prevents our
+being so.
+
+200.--Virtue would not go far did not vanity
+escort her.
+
+201.--He who thinks he has the power to content
+the world greatly deceives himself, but he who thinks
+that the world cannot be content with him deceives
+himself yet more.
+
+202.--Falsely honest men are those who disguise
+their faults both to themselves and others; truly honest
+men are those who know them perfectly and confess
+them.
+
+203.--He is really wise who is nettled at nothing.
+
+204.--The coldness of women is a balance and bur-
+den they add to their beauty.
+
+205.--Virtue in woman is often the love of reputa-
+tion and repose.
+
+206.--He is a truly good man who desires always to
+bear the inspection of good men.
+
+207.--Folly follows us at all stages of life. If one
+appears wise 'tis but because his folly is proportioned
+to his age and fortune.
+
+208.--There are foolish people who know and who
+skilfully use their folly.
+
+209.--Who lives without folly is not so wise as he
+thinks.
+
+210.--In growing old we become more foolish--and
+more wise.
+
+211.--There are people who are like farces, which
+are praised but for a time (however foolish and dis-
+tasteful they may be).
+
+[The last clause is added from Edition of 1665.]
+
+212.--Most people judge men only by success or by
+fortune.
+
+213.--Love of glory, fear of shame, greed of fortune,
+the desire to make life agreeable and comfortable, and
+the wish to depreciate others are often causes of that
+bravery so vaunted among men.
+
+[Junius said of the Marquis of Granby, "He was as
+brave as a total absence of all feeling and reflection could
+make him."--21st Jan. 1769.]
+
+214.--Valour in common soldiers is a perilous
+method of earning their living.
+
+["Men venture necks to gain a fortune,
+ The soldier does it ev{'}ry day,
+ (Eight to the week) for sixpence pay."
+ {--Samuel Butler,} HUDIBRAS, Part II., canto i., line 512.]
+
+215.--Perfect bravery and sheer cowardice are two
+extremes rarely found. The space between them is
+vast, and embraces all other sorts of courage. The
+difference between them is not less than between faces
+and tempers. Men will freely expose themselves at
+the beginning of an action, and relax and be easily
+discouraged if it should last. Some are content to
+satisfy worldly honour, and beyond that will do little
+else. Some are not always equally masters of their
+timidity. Others allow themselves to be overcome
+by panic; others charge because they dare not remain
+at their posts. Some may be found whose courage is
+strengthened by small perils, which prepare them to
+face greater dangers. Some will dare a sword cut and
+flinch from a bullet; others dread bullets little and fear
+to fight with swords. These varied kinds of courage
+agree in this, that night, by increasing fear and conceal-
+ing gallant or cowardly actions, allows men to spare
+themselves. There is even a more general discretion
+to be observed, for we meet with no man who does all
+he would have done if he were assured of getting off
+scot-free; so that it is certain that the fear of death
+does somewhat subtract from valour.
+
+[See also "Table Talk of Napoleon," who agrees with
+this, so far as to say that few, but himself, had a two
+o'clock of the morning valour.]
+
+216.--Perfect valour is to do without witnesses what
+one would do before all the world.
+
+["It is said of untrue valours that some men's valours are
+in the eyes of them that look on."--Bacon, ADVANCEMENT
+OF LEARNING{, (1605), Book I, Section II, paragraph 5}.]
+
+217.--Intrepidity is an extraordinary strength of
+soul which raises it above the troubles, disorders, and
+emotions which the sight of great perils can arouse in
+it: by this strength heroes maintain a calm aspect and
+preserve their reason and liberty in the most sur-
+prising and terrible accidents.
+
+218.--Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue.
+
+[So Massillon, in one of his sermons, "Vice pays homage
+to virtue in doing honour to her appearance."
+
+So Junius, writing to the Duke of Grafton, says, "You
+have done as much mischief to the community as Machia-
+vel, if Machiavel had not known that an appearance of
+morals and religion are useful in society."--28 Sept. 1771.]
+
+219.--Most men expose themselves in battle enough
+to save their honor, few wish to do so more than
+sufficiently, or than is necessary to make the design
+for which they expose themselves succeed.
+
+220.--Vanity, shame, and above all disposition, often
+make men brave and women chaste.
+
+["Vanity bids all her sons be brave and all her daughters
+chaste and courteous. But why do we need her instruc-
+tion?"--Sterne, SERMONS.]
+
+221.--We do not wish to lose life; we do wish to
+gain glory, and this makes brave men show more tact
+and address in avoiding death, than rogues show in
+preserving their fortunes.
+
+222.--Few persons on the first approach of age do
+not show wherein their body, or their mind, is begin-
+ning to fail.
+
+223.--Gratitude is as the good faith of merchants:
+it holds commerce together; and we do not pay be-
+cause it is just to pay debts, but because we shall
+thereby more easily find people who will lend.
+
+224.--All those who pay the debts of gratitude can-
+not thereby flatter themselves that they are grateful.
+
+225.--What makes false reckoning, as regards gra-
+titude, is that the pride of the giver and the receiver
+cannot agree as to the value of the benefit.
+
+["The first foundation of friendship is not the power of
+conferring benefits, but the equality with which they are
+received, and may be returned."--Junius's LETTER TO THE
+KING.]
+
+226.--Too great a hurry to discharge of an obliga-
+tion is a kind of ingratitude.
+
+227.--Lucky people are bad hands at correcting
+their faults; they always believe that they are right
+when fortune backs up their vice or folly.
+
+["The power of fortune is confessed only by the misera-
+ble, for the happy impute all their success to prudence and
+merit."--Swift, THOUGHTS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS]
+
+228.--Pride will not owe, self-love will not pay.
+
+229.--The good we have received from a man should
+make us excuse the wrong he does us.
+
+230.--Nothing is so infectious as example, and we
+never do great good or evil without producing the like.
+We imitate good actions by emulation, and bad ones
+by the evil of our nature, which shame imprisons
+until example liberates.
+
+231.--It is great folly to wish only to be wise.
+
+232.--Whatever pretext we give to our afflictions it
+is always interest or vanity that causes them.
+
+233.--In afflictions there are various kinds of hypo-
+crisy. In one, under the pretext of weeping for one
+dear to us we bemoan ourselves; we regret her good
+opinion of us, we deplore the loss of our comfort, our
+pleasure, our consideration. Thus the dead have the
+credit of tears shed for the living. I affirm 'tis a kind
+of hypocrisy which in these afflictions deceives itself.
+There is another kind not so innocent because it im-
+poses on all the world, that is the grief of those who
+aspire to the glory of a noble and immortal sorrow.
+After Time, which absorbs all, has obliterated what
+sorrow they had, they still obstinately obtrude their
+tears, their sighs their groans, they wear a solemn face,
+and try to persuade others by all their acts, that their
+grief will end only with their life. This sad and
+distressing vanity is commonly found in ambitious
+women. As their sex closes to them all paths to glory,
+they strive to render themselves celebrated by show-
+ing an inconsolable affliction. There is yet another
+kind of tears arising from but small sources, which
+flow easily and cease as easily. One weeps to achieve
+a reputation for tenderness, weeps to be pitied, weeps
+to be bewept, in fact one weeps to avoid the disgrace
+of not weeping!
+
+["In grief the {PLEASURE} is still uppermost{;} and the afflic-
+tion we suffer has no resemblance to absolute pain which
+is always odious, and which we endeavour to shake off as
+soon as possible."--Burke, SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL{, (1756),
+Part I, Sect. V}.]
+
+234.--It is more often from pride than from igno-
+rance that we are so obstinately opposed to current
+opinions; we find the first places taken, and we do
+not want to be the last.
+
+235.--We are easily consoled at the misfortunes of
+our friends when they enable us to prove our tender-
+ness for them.
+
+236.--It would seem that even self-love may be the
+dupe of goodness and forget itself when we work for
+others. And yet it is but taking the shortest way to
+arrive at its aim, taking usury under the pretext of
+giving, in fact winning everybody in a subtle and de-
+licate manner.
+
+237.--No one should be praised for his goodness if
+he has not strength enough to be wicked. All other
+goodness is but too often an idleness or powerlessness
+of will.
+
+238.--It is not so dangerous to do wrong to most
+men, as to do them too much good.
+
+239.--Nothing flatters our pride so much as the
+confidence of the great, because we regard it as the
+result of our worth, without remembering that gene-
+rally 'tis but vanity, or the inability to keep a secret.
+
+240.--We may say of conformity as distinguished
+from beauty, that it is a symmetry which knows no
+rules, and a secret harmony of features both one with
+each other and with the colour and appearance of the
+person.
+
+241.--Flirtation is at the bottom of woman's nature,
+although all do not practise it, some being restrained
+by fear, others by sense.
+
+["By nature woman is a flirt, but her flirting changes
+both in the mode and object according to her opinions."--
+Rousseau, EMILE.]
+
+242.--We often bore others when we think we
+cannot possibly bore them.
+
+243.--Few things are impossible in themselves;
+application to make them succeed fails us more often
+than the means.
+
+244.--Sovereign ability consists in knowing the
+value of things.
+
+245.--There is great ability in knowing how to con-
+ceal one's ability.
+
+["You have accomplished a great stroke in diplomacy
+when you have made others think that you have only very
+average abilities."--LA BRUYERE.]
+
+246.--What seems generosity is often disguised am-
+bition, that despises small to run after greater inte-
+rest.
+
+247.--The fidelity of most men is merely an inven-
+tion of self-love to win confidence; a method to place
+us above others and to render us depositaries of the
+most important matters.
+
+248.--Magnanimity despises all, to win all.
+
+249.--There is no less eloquence in the voice, in the
+eyes and in the air of a speaker than in his choice of
+words.
+
+250.--True eloquence consists in saying all that
+should be, not all that could be said.
+
+251.--There are people whose faults become them,
+others whose very virtues disgrace them.
+
+["There are faults which do him honour, and virtues
+that disgrace him."--Junius, LETTER OF 28TH MAY, 1770.]
+
+252.--It is as common to change one's tastes, as it
+is uncommon to change one's inclinations.
+
+253.--Interest sets at work all sorts of virtues and
+vices.
+
+254.--Humility is often a feigned submission which
+we employ to supplant others. It is one of the de-
+vices of Pride to lower us to raise us; and truly pride
+transforms itself in a thousand ways, and is never so
+well disguised and more able to deceive than when it
+hides itself under the form of humility.
+
+["Grave and plausible enough to be thought fit for busi-
+ness."--Junius, LETTER TO THE DUKE OF GRAFTON.
+
+"He saw a cottage with a double coach-house,
+ A cottage of gentility,
+ And the devil was pleased, for his darling sin
+ Is the pride that apes humility."
+ Southey, DEVIL'S WALK.]
+
+{There are numerous corrections necessary for this
+quotation; I will keep the original above so you can
+compare the correct passages:
+
+"He passed a cottage with a double coach-house,
+ A cottage of gentility,
+ And he owned with a grin,
+ That his favourite sin
+ Is pride that apes humility."
+ --Southey, DEVIL'S WALK, Stanza 8.
+
+"And the devil did grin, for his darling sin
+ Is pride that apes humility."
+ --Samuel Taylor Coleridge, THE DEVIL'S THOUGHTS}
+
+255.--All feelings have their peculiar tone of voice,
+gestures and looks, and this harmony, as it is good
+or bad, pleasant or unpleasant, makes people agreeable
+or disagreeable.
+
+256.--In all professions we affect a part and an ap-
+pearance to seem what we wish to be. Thus the world
+is merely composed of actors.
+
+["All the world's a stage, and all the men and women
+merely players."--Shakespeare, AS YOU LIKE IT{, Act II,
+Scene VII, Jaques}.
+
+"Life is no more than a dramatic scene, in which the
+hero should preserve his consistency to the last."--Junius.]
+
+257.--Gravity is a mysterious carriage of the body
+invented to conceal the want of mind.
+
+["Gravity is the very essence of imposture."--Shaftes-
+bury, CHARACTERISTICS, p. 11, vol. I. "The very essence of
+gravity is design, and consequently deceit; a taught trick
+to gain credit with the world for more sense and know-
+ledge than a man was worth, and that with all its preten-
+sions it was no better, but often worse, than what a French
+wit had long ago defined it--a mysterious carriage of the
+body to cover the defects of the mind."--Sterne, TRISTRAM
+SHANDY, vol. I., chap. ii.]
+
+258.--Good taste arises more from judgment than
+wit.
+
+259.--The pleasure of love is in loving, we are hap-
+pier in the passion we feel than in that we inspire.
+
+260.--Civility is but a desire to receive civility, and
+to be esteemed polite.
+
+261.--The usual education of young people is to in-
+spire them with a second self-love.
+
+262.--There is no passion wherein self-love reigns
+so powerfully as in love, and one is always more ready
+to sacrifice the peace of the loved one than his own.
+
+263.--What we call liberality is often but the vanity
+of giving, which we like more than that we give away.
+
+264.--Pity is often a reflection of our own evils in
+the ills of others. It is a delicate foresight of the
+troubles into which we may fall. We help others
+that on like occasions we may be helped ourselves,
+and these services which we render, are in reality
+benefits we confer on ourselves by anticipation.
+
+["GRIEF for the calamity of another is pity, and ariseth
+from the imagination that a like calamity may befal him-
+self{;} and therefore is called compassion."--HOBBES' LEVIA-
+THAN{, (1651), Part I, Chapter VI}.]
+
+265.--A narrow mind begets obstinacy, and we do
+not easily believe what we cannot see.
+
+["Stiff in opinion, always in the wrong."
+ Dryden, ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL{, line 547}.]
+
+266.--We deceive ourselves if we believe that there
+are violent passions like ambition and love that can
+triumph over others. Idleness, languishing as she is,
+does not often fail in being mistress; she usurps
+authority over all the plans and actions of life; im-
+perceptibly consuming and destroying both passions
+and virtues.
+
+267.--A quickness in believing evil without having
+sufficiently examined it, is the effect of pride and
+laziness. We wish to find the guilty, and we do not
+wish to trouble ourselves in examining the crime.
+
+268.--We credit judges with the meanest motives,
+and yet we desire our reputation and fame should
+depend upon the judgment of men, who are all, either
+from their jealousy or pre-occupation or want of in-
+telligence, opposed to us--and yet 'tis only to make
+these men decide in our favour that we peril in so
+many ways both our peace and our life.
+
+269.--No man is clever enough to know all the evil
+he does.
+
+270.--One honour won is a surety for more.
+
+271.--Youth is a continual intoxication; it is the
+fever of reason.
+
+["The best of life is but intoxication."--{Lord Byron, }
+Don Juan{, Canto II, stanza 179}.
+In the 1st Edition, 1665, the maxim finishes with--"it is
+the fever of health, the folly of reason."]
+
+272.--Nothing should so humiliate men who have
+deserved great praise, as the care they have taken
+to acquire it by the smallest means.
+
+273.--There are persons of whom the world approves
+who have no merit beyond the vices they use in the
+affairs of life.
+
+274.--The beauty of novelty is to love as the flower
+to the fruit; it lends a lustre which is easily lost,
+but which never returns.
+
+275.--Natural goodness, which boasts of being so
+apparent, is often smothered by the least interest.
+
+276.--Absence extinguishes small passions and in-
+creases great ones, as the wind will blow out a candle,
+and blow in a fire.
+
+277.--Women often think they love when they do
+not love. The business of a love affair, the emotion of
+mind that sentiment induces, the natural bias towards
+the pleasure of being loved, the difficulty of refusing,
+persuades them that they have real passion when they
+have but flirtation.
+
+["And if in fact she takes a {"}GRANDE PASSION{"},
+ It is a very serious thing indeed:
+ Nine times in ten 'tis but caprice or fashion,
+ Coquetry, or a wish to take the lead,
+ The pride of a mere child with a new sash on.
+ Or wish to make a rival's bosom bleed:
+ But the {TENTH} instance will be a tornado,
+ For there's no saying what they will or may do."
+ {--Lord Byron, }DON JUAN, canto xii. stanza 77.]
+
+278.--What makes us so often discontented with
+those who transact business for us is that they almost
+always abandon the interest of their friends for the
+interest of the business, because they wish to have
+the honour of succeeding in that which they have
+undertaken.
+
+279.--When we exaggerate the tenderness of our
+friends towards us, it is often less from gratitude
+than from a desire to exhibit our own merit.
+
+280.--The praise we give to new comers into the
+world arises from the envy we bear to those who are
+established.
+
+281.--Pride, which inspires, often serves to mode-
+rate envy.
+
+282.--Some disguised lies so resemble truth, that
+we should judge badly were we not deceived.
+
+283.--Sometimes there is not less ability in knowing
+how to use than in giving good advice.
+
+284.--There are wicked people who would be much
+less dangerous if they were wholly without goodness.
+
+285.--Magnanimity is sufficiently defined by its
+name, nevertheless one can say it is the good sense
+of pride, the most noble way of receiving praise.
+
+286.--It is impossible to love a second time those
+whom we have really ceased to love.
+
+287.--Fertility of mind does not furnish us with so
+many resources on the same matter, as the lack of
+intelligence makes us hesitate at each thing our ima-
+gination presents, and hinders us from at first discern-
+ing which is the best.
+
+288.--There are matters and maladies which at
+certain times remedies only serve to make worse;
+true skill consists in knowing when it is dangerous to
+use them.
+
+289.--Affected simplicity is refined imposture.
+
+[Domitianus simplicitatis ac modestiae imagine studium
+litterarum et amorem carminum simulabat quo velaret
+animum et fratris aemulationi subduceretur.--Tacitus,
+ANN. iv.]
+
+290.--There are as many errors of temper as of
+mind.
+
+291.--Man's merit, like the crops, has its season.
+
+292.--One may say of temper as of many buildings;
+it has divers aspects, some agreeable, others dis-
+agreeable.
+
+293.--Moderation cannot claim the merit of op-
+posing and overcoming Ambition: they are never
+found together. Moderation is the languor and sloth
+of the soul, Ambition its activity and heat.
+
+294.--We always like those who admire us, we do
+not always like those whom we admire.
+
+295.--It is well that we know not all our wishes.
+
+296.--It is difficult to love those we do not esteem,
+but it is no less so to love those whom we esteem much
+more than ourselves.
+
+297.--Bodily temperaments have a common course
+and rule which imperceptibly affect our will. They
+advance in combination, and successively exercise a
+secret empire over us, so that, without our perceiving
+it, they become a great part of all our actions.
+
+298.--The gratitude of most men is but a secret
+desire of receiving greater benefits.
+
+[Hence the common proverb "Gratitude is merely a
+lively sense of favors to come."]
+
+299.--Almost all the world takes pleasure in paying
+small debts; many people show gratitude for trifling,
+but there is hardly one who does not show ingrati-
+tude for great favours.
+
+300.--There are follies as catching as infections.
+
+301.--Many people despise, but few know how to
+bestow wealth.
+
+302.--Only in things of small value we usually are
+bold enough not to trust to appearances.
+
+303.--Whatever good quality may be imputed to
+us, we ourselves find nothing new in it.
+
+304.--We may forgive those who bore us, we cannot
+forgive those whom we bore.
+
+305.--Interest which is accused of all our misdeeds
+often should be praised for our good deeds.
+
+306.--We find very few ungrateful people when we
+are able to confer favours.
+
+307.--It is as proper to be boastful alone as it is
+ridiculous to be so in company.
+
+308.--Moderation is made a virtue to limit the am-
+bition of the great; to console ordinary people for
+their small fortune and equally small ability.
+
+309.--There are persons fated to be fools, who com-
+mit follies not only by choice, but who are forced by
+fortune to do so.
+
+310.--Sometimes there are accidents in our life the
+skilful extrication from which demands a little folly.
+
+311.--If there be men whose folly has never ap-
+peared, it is because it has never been closely looked
+for.
+
+312.--Lovers are never tired of each other,--they
+always speak of themselves.
+
+313.--How is it that our memory is good enough to
+retain the least triviality that happens to us, and yet
+not good enough to recollect how often we have told
+it to the same person?
+
+["Old men who yet retain the memory of things past,
+and forget how often they have told them, are most tedious
+companions."--Montaigne, {ESSAYS, Book I, Chapter IX}.]
+
+314.--The extreme delight we take in talking of
+ourselves should warn us that it is not shared by those
+who listen.
+
+315.--What commonly hinders us from showing the
+recesses of our heart to our friends, is not the dis-
+trust we have of them, but that we have of our-
+selves.
+
+316.--Weak persons cannot be sincere.
+
+317.--'Tis a small misfortune to oblige an ungrate-
+ful man; but it is unbearable to be obliged by a
+scoundrel.
+
+318.--We may find means to cure a fool of his folly,
+but there are none to set straight a cross-grained
+spirit.
+
+319.--If we take the liberty to dwell on their faults
+we cannot long preserve the feelings we should hold
+towards our friends and benefactors.
+
+320.--To praise princes for virtues they do not pos-
+sess is but to reproach them with impunity.
+
+["Praise undeserved is satire in disguise," quoted by
+Pope from a poem which has not survived, "The Garland,"
+by Mr. Broadhurst. "In some cases exaggerated or
+inappropriate praise becomes the most severe satire."--
+Scott, WOODSTOCK.]
+
+321.--We are nearer loving those who hate us, than
+those who love us more than we desire.
+
+322.--Those only are despicable who fear to be
+despised.
+
+323.--Our wisdom is no less at the mercy of Fortune
+than our goods.
+
+324.--There is more self-love than love in jealousy.
+
+325.--We often comfort ourselves by the weakness
+of evils, for which reason has not the strength to con-
+sole us.
+
+326.--Ridicule dishonours more than dishonour
+itself.
+
+["No," says a commentator, "Ridicule may do harm,
+but it cannot dishonour; it is vice which confers dis-
+honour."]
+
+327.--We own to small faults to persuade others
+that we have not great ones.
+
+328.--Envy is more irreconcilable than hatred.
+
+329.--We believe, sometimes, that we hate flattery
+--we only dislike the method.
+
+["{But} when I tell him he hates flatter{ers},
+ He says he does, being then most flattered."
+ Shakespeare, JULIUS CAESAR{, Act II, Scene I, Decius}.]
+
+330.--We pardon in the degree that we love.
+
+331.--It is more difficult to be faithful to a mistress
+when one is happy, than when we are ill-treated by
+her.
+
+[Si qua volet regnare diu contemnat amantem.--Ovid,
+AMORES, ii. 19.]
+
+332.--Women do not know all their powers of
+flirtation.
+
+333.--Women cannot be completely severe unless
+they hate.
+
+334.--Women can less easily resign flirtations than
+love.
+
+335.--In love deceit almost always goes further
+than mistrust.
+
+336.--There is a kind of love, the excess of which
+forbids jealousy.
+
+337.--There are certain good qualities as there are
+senses, and those who want them can neither per-
+ceive nor understand them.
+
+338.--When our hatred is too bitter it places us
+below those whom we hate.
+
+339.--We only appreciate our good or evil in pro-
+portion to our self-love.
+
+340.--The wit of most women rather strengthens
+their folly than their reason.
+
+["Women have an entertaining tattle, and sometimes wit,
+but for solid reasoning and good sense I never knew one in
+my life that had it, and who reasoned and acted conse-
+quentially for four and twenty hours together."--Lord
+Chesterfield, LETTER 129.]
+
+341.--The heat of youth is not more opposed to
+safety than the coldness of age.
+
+342.--The accent of our native country dwells in
+the heart and mind as well as on the tongue.
+
+343.--To be a great man one should know how to
+profit by every phase of fortune.
+
+344.--Most men, like plants, possess hidden quali-
+ties which chance discovers.
+
+345.--Opportunity makes us known to others, but
+more to ourselves.
+
+346.--If a woman's temper is beyond control there
+can be no control of the mind or heart.
+
+347.--We hardly find any persons of good sense, save
+those who agree with us.
+
+["That was excellently observed, say I, when I read
+an author when his opinion agrees with mine."--Swift,
+THOUGHTS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS.]
+
+348.--When one loves one doubts even what one
+most believes.
+
+349.--The greatest miracle of love is to eradicate
+flirtation.
+
+350.--Why we hate with so much bitterness those
+who deceive us is because they think themselves more
+clever than we are.
+
+["I could pardon all his (Louis XI.'s) deceit, but I can-
+not forgive his supposing me capable of the gross folly
+of being duped by his professions."--Sir Walter Scott,
+QUENTIN DURWARD.]
+
+351.--We have much trouble to break with one,
+when we no longer are in love.
+
+352.--We almost always are bored with persons with
+whom we should not be bored.
+
+353.--A gentleman may love like a lunatic, but not
+like a beast.
+
+354.--There are certain defects which well mounted
+glitter like virtue itself.
+
+355.--Sometimes we lose friends for whose loss our
+regret is greater than our grief, and others for whom
+our grief is greater than our regret.
+
+356.--Usually we only praise heartily those who
+admire us.
+
+357.--Little minds are too much wounded by little
+things; great minds see all and are not even hurt.
+
+358.--Humility is the true proof of Christian
+virtues; without it we retain all our faults, and they
+are only covered by pride to hide them from others,
+and often from ourselves.
+
+359.--Infidelities should extinguish love, and we
+ought not to be jealous when we have cause to be so.
+No persons escape causing jealousy who are worthy of
+exciting it.
+
+360.--We are more humiliated by the least infidelity
+towards us, than by our greatest towards others.
+
+361.--Jealousy is always born with love, but does
+not always die with it.
+
+362.--Most women do not grieve so much for the
+death of their lovers for love's-sake, as to show they
+were worthy of being beloved.
+
+363.--The evils we do to others give us less pain
+than those we do to ourselves.
+
+364.--We well know that it is bad taste to talk of
+our wives; but we do not so well know that it is the
+same to speak of ourselves.
+
+365.--There are virtues which degenerate into vices
+when they arise from Nature, and others which when
+acquired are never perfect. For example, reason
+must teach us to manage our estate and our con-
+fidence, while Nature should have given us goodness
+and valour.
+
+366.--However we distrust the sincerity of those
+whom we talk with, we always believe them more sin-
+cere with us than with others.
+
+367.--There are few virtuous women who are not
+tired of their part.
+
+["Every woman is at heart a rake."--Pope. MORAL
+ESSAYS, ii.]
+
+368.--The greater number of good women are like
+concealed treasures, safe as no one has searched for
+them.
+
+369.--The violences we put upon ourselves to escape
+love are often more cruel than the cruelty of those
+we love.
+
+370.--There are not many cowards who know the
+whole of their fear.
+
+371.--It is generally the fault of the loved one not
+to perceive when love ceases.
+
+372.--Most young people think they are natural
+when they are only boorish and rude.
+
+373.--Some tears after having deceived others de-
+ceive ourselves.
+
+374.--If we think we love a woman for love of
+herself we are greatly deceived.
+
+375.--Ordinary men commonly condemn what is
+beyond them.
+
+376.--Envy is destroyed by true friendship, flirta-
+tion by true love.
+
+377.--The greatest mistake of penetration is not to
+have fallen short, but to have gone too far.
+
+378.--We may bestow advice, but we cannot inspire
+the conduct.
+
+379.--As our merit declines so also does our taste.
+
+380.--Fortune makes visible our virtues or our
+vices, as light does objects.
+
+381.--The struggle we undergo to remain faithful
+to one we love is little better than infidelity.
+
+382.--Our actions are like the rhymed ends of
+blank verses (BOUTS-RIMES) where to each one puts
+what construction he pleases.
+
+[The BOUTS-RIMES was a literary game popular in the 17th
+and 18th centuries--the rhymed words at the end of a line
+being given for others to fill up. Thus Horace Walpole
+being given, "brook, why, crook, I," returned the bur-
+lesque verse--
+ "I sits with my toes in a BROOK,
+ And if any one axes me WHY?
+ I gies 'em a rap with my CROOK,
+ 'Tis constancy makes me, ses I."]
+
+383.--The desire of talking about ourselves, and of
+putting our faults in the light we wish them to be
+seen, forms a great part of our sincerity.
+
+384.--We should only be astonished at still being
+able to be astonished.
+
+385.--It is equally as difficult to be contented when
+one has too much or too little love.
+
+386.--No people are more often wrong than those
+who will not allow themselves to be wrong.
+
+387.--A fool has not stuff in him to be good.
+
+388.--If vanity does not overthrow all virtues, at
+least she makes them totter.
+
+389.--What makes the vanity of others unsupport-
+able is that it wounds our own.
+
+390.--We give up more easily our interest than our
+taste.
+
+391.--Fortune appears so blind to none as to those
+to whom she has done no good.
+
+392.--We should manage fortune like our health,
+enjoy it when it is good, be patient when it is bad,
+and never resort to strong remedies but in an extremity.
+
+393.--Awkwardness sometimes disappears in the
+camp, never in the court.
+
+394.--A man is often more clever than one other, but
+not than all others.
+
+["Singuli decipere ac decipi possunt, nemo omnes,
+omnes neminem fefellerunt."--Pliny{ the Younger,
+PANEGYRICUS, LXII}.]
+
+395.--We are often less unhappy at being deceived
+by one we loved, than on being deceived.
+
+396.--We keep our first lover for a long time--if we
+do not get a second.
+
+397.--We have not the courage to say generally
+that we have no faults, and that our enemies have
+no good qualities; but in fact we are not far from be-
+lieving so.
+
+398.--Of all our faults that which we most readily
+admit is idleness: we believe that it makes all virtues
+ineffectual, and that without utterly destroying, it at
+least suspends their operation.
+
+399.--There is a kind of greatness which does not
+depend upon fortune: it is a certain manner what
+distinguishes us, and which seems to destine us for
+great things; it is the value we insensibly set upon
+ourselves; it is by this quality that we gain the
+deference of other men, and it is this which com-
+monly raises us more above them, than birth, rank,
+or even merit itself.
+
+400.--There may be talent without position, but
+there is no position without some kind of talent.
+
+401.--Rank is to merit what dress is to a pretty
+woman.
+
+402.--What we find the least of in flirtation is love.
+
+403.--Fortune sometimes uses our faults to exalt us,
+and there are tiresome people whose deserts would be
+ill rewarded if we did not desire to purchase their
+absence.
+
+404.--It appears that nature has hid at the bottom
+of our hearts talents and abilities unknown to us. It
+is only the passions that have the power of bringing
+them to light, and sometimes give us views more
+true and more perfect than art could possibly do.
+
+405.--We reach quite inexperienced the different
+stages of life, and often, in spite of the number of our
+years, we lack experience.
+
+["To most men experience is like the stern lights of a
+ship which illumine only the track it has passed."--
+Coleridge.]
+
+406.--Flirts make it a point of honour to be jealous
+of their lovers, to conceal their envy of other women.
+
+407.--It may well be that those who have trapped
+us by their tricks do not seem to us so foolish as we
+seem to ourselves when trapped by the tricks of
+others.
+
+408.--The most dangerous folly of old persons who
+have been loveable is to forget that they are no
+longer so.
+
+["Every woman who is not absolutely ugly thinks herself
+handsome. The suspicion of age no woman, let her be
+ever so old, forgives."--Lord Chesterfield, LETTER 129.]
+
+409.--We should often be ashamed of our very best
+actions if the world only saw the motives which caused
+them.
+
+410.--The greatest effort of friendship is not to show
+our faults to a friend, but to show him his own.
+
+4ll.--We have few faults which are not far more
+excusable than the means we adopt to hide them.
+
+412.--Whatever disgrace we may have deserved, it
+is almost always in our power to re-establish our cha-
+racter.
+
+["This is hardly a period at which the most irregular
+character may not be redeemed. The mistakes of one sin
+find a retreat in patriotism, those of the other in devotion."
+-Junius, LETTER TO THE KING.]
+
+413.--A man cannot please long who has only one
+kind of wit.
+
+[According to Segrais this maxim was a hit at Racine
+and Boileau, who, despising ordinary conversation, talked
+incessantly of literature; but there is some doubt as to
+Segrais' statement.--Aime Martin.]
+
+414.--Idiots and lunatics see only their own wit.
+
+415.--Wit sometimes enables us to act rudely with
+impunity.
+
+416.--The vivacity which increases in old age is not
+far removed from folly.
+
+["How ill {white} hairs become {a} fool and jester."--
+Shakespeare{, King Henry IV, Part II, Act. V, Scene V,
+King}.
+
+"Can age itself forget that you are now in the last act of
+life? Can grey hairs make folly venerable, and is there
+no period to be reserved for meditation or retirement."--
+Junius, TO THE DUKE OF BEDFORD, 19th Sept. 1769.]
+
+417.--In love the quickest is always the best cure.
+
+418.--Young women who do not want to appear
+flirts, and old men who do not want to appear ridi-
+culous, should not talk of love as a matter wherein
+they can have any interest.
+
+419.--We may seem great in a post beneath our
+capacity, but we oftener seem little in a post above it.
+
+420.--We often believe we have constancy in mis-
+fortune when we have nothing but debasement, and
+we suffer misfortunes without regarding them as
+cowards who let themselves be killed from fear of
+defending themselves.
+
+421.--Conceit causes more conversation than wit.
+
+422.--All passions make us commit some faults,
+love alone makes us ridiculous.
+
+["In love we all are fools alike."--Gay{, THE
+BEGGAR'S OPERA, (1728), Act III, Scene I, Lucy}.]
+
+423.--Few know how to be old.
+
+424.--We often credit ourselves with vices the
+reverse of what we have, thus when weak we boast of
+our obstinacy.
+
+425.--Penetration has a spice of divination in it
+which tickles our vanity more than any other quality
+of the mind.
+
+426.--The charm of novelty and old custom, how-
+ever opposite to each other, equally blind us to the
+faults of our friends.
+
+["Two things the most opposite blind us equally, custom
+and novelty."-La Bruyere, DES JUDGEMENTS.]
+
+427.--Most friends sicken us of friendship, most
+devotees of devotion.
+
+428.--We easily forgive in our friends those faults
+we do not perceive.
+
+429.--Women who love, pardon more readily great
+indiscretions than little infidelities.
+
+430.--In the old age of love as in life we still sur-
+vive for the evils, though no longer for the pleasures.
+
+["The youth of friendship is better than its old age."--
+Hazlitt's CHARACTERISTICS, 229.]
+
+431.--Nothing prevents our being unaffected so
+much as our desire to seem so.
+
+432.--To praise good actions heartily is in some
+measure to take part in them.
+
+433.--The most certain sign of being born with
+great qualities is to be born without envy.
+
+["Nemo alienae virtuti invidet qui satis confidet suae."
+-Cicero IN MARC ANT.]
+
+434.--When our friends have deceived us we owe
+them but indifference to the tokens of their friend-
+ship, yet for their misfortunes we always owe them
+pity.
+
+435.--Luck and temper rule the world.
+
+436.--It is far easier to know men than to know
+man.
+
+437.--We should not judge of a man's merit by his
+great abilities, but by the use he makes of them.
+
+438.--There is a certain lively gratitude which not
+only releases us from benefits received, but which also,
+by making a return to our friends as payment, renders
+them indebted to us.
+
+["And understood not that a grateful mind,
+ By owing owes not, but is at once
+ Indebted and discharged."
+ Milton. PARADISE LOST.]
+
+439.--We should earnestly desire but few things if
+we clearly knew what we desired.
+
+440.--The cause why the majority of women are so
+little given to friendship is, that it is insipid after
+having felt love.
+
+["Those who have experienced a great passion neglect
+friendship, and those who have united themselves to friend-
+ship have nought to do with love."--La Bruyere. DU COEUR.]
+
+441.--As in friendship so in love, we are often hap-
+pier from ignorance than from knowledge.
+
+442.--We try to make a virtue of vices we are loth
+to correct.
+
+443.--The most violent passions give some respite,
+but vanity always disturbs us.
+
+444.--Old fools are more foolish than young fools.
+
+["MALVOLIO. Infirmity{,} that decays the wise{,} doth eve{r}
+make the better fool.
+ CLOWN. God send you, sir, a speedy infirmity{,} for the
+better increasing of your folly."--Shakespeare. TWELFTH
+NIGHT{, Act I, Scene V}.]
+
+445.--Weakness is more hostile to virtue than vice.
+
+446.--What makes the grief of shame and jealousy
+so acute is that vanity cannot aid us in enduring them.
+
+447.--Propriety is the least of all laws, but the most
+obeyed.
+
+[Honour has its supreme laws, to which education is
+bound to conform....Those things which honour
+forbids are more rigorously forbidden when the laws do
+not concur in the prohibition, and those it commands are
+more strongly insisted upon when they happen not to be
+commanded by law.--Montesquieu, {THE SPIRIT OF LAWS, }b. 4,
+c. ii.]
+
+448.--A well-trained mind has less difficulty in sub-
+mitting to than in guiding an ill-trained mind.
+
+449.--When fortune surprises us by giving us some
+great office without having gradually led us to expect
+it, or without having raised our hopes, it is well nigh
+impossible to occupy it well, and to appear worthy
+to fill it.
+
+450.--Our pride is often increased by what we
+retrench from our other faults.
+
+["The loss of sensual pleasures was supplied and com-
+pensated by spiritual pride."--Gibbon. DECLINE AND FALL,
+chap. xv.]
+
+451.--No fools so wearisome as those who have some
+wit.
+
+452.--No one believes that in every respect he is
+behind the man he considers the ablest in the world.
+
+453.--In great matters we should not try so much
+to create opportunities as to utilise those that offer
+themselves.
+
+[Yet Lord Bacon says "A wise man will make more
+opportunities than he finds."--Essays, {(1625),
+"Of Ceremonies and Respects"}]
+
+454.--There are few occasions when we should make
+a bad bargain by giving up the good on condition that
+no ill was said of us.
+
+455.--However disposed the world may be to judge
+wrongly, it far oftener favours false merit than does
+justice to true.
+
+456.--Sometimes we meet a fool with wit, never one
+with discretion.
+
+457.--We should gain more by letting the world see
+what we are than by trying to seem what we are not.
+
+458.--Our enemies come nearer the truth in the
+opinions they form of us than we do in our opinion of
+ourselves.
+
+459.--There are many remedies to cure love, yet
+none are infallible.
+
+460.--It would be well for us if we knew all our
+passions make us do.
+
+461.--Age is a tyrant who forbids at the penalty of
+life all the pleasures of youth.
+
+462.--The same pride which makes us blame faults
+from which we believe ourselves free causes us to
+despise the good qualities we have not.
+
+463.--There is often more pride than goodness in
+our grief for our enemies' miseries; it is to show how
+superior we are to them, that we bestow on them the
+sign of our compassion.
+
+464.--There exists an excess of good and evil which
+surpasses our comprehension.
+
+465.--Innocence is most fortunate if it finds the
+same protection as crime.
+
+466.--Of all the violent passions the one that
+becomes a woman best is love.
+
+467.--Vanity makes us sin more against our taste
+than reason.
+
+468.--Some bad qualities form great talents.
+
+469.--We never desire earnestly what we desire in
+reason.
+
+470.--All our qualities are uncertain and doubtful,
+both the good as well as the bad, and nearly all are
+creatures of opportunities.
+
+471.--In their first passion women love their lovers,
+in all the others they love love.
+
+["In her first passion woman loves her lover,
+ In all her others what she loves is love."
+ {--Lord Byron, }Don Juan, Canto iii., stanza 3.
+"We truly love once, the first time; the subsequent pas-
+sions are more or less involuntary." La Bruyere: DU COEUR.]
+
+472.--Pride as the other passions has its follies. We
+are ashamed to own we are jealous, and yet we plume
+ourselves in having been and being able to be so.
+
+473.--However rare true love is, true friendship is
+rarer.
+
+["It is more common to see perfect love than real friend-
+ship."--La Bruyere. DU COEUR.]
+
+474.--There are few women whose charm survives
+their beauty.
+
+475.--The desire to be pitied or to be admired often
+forms the greater part of our confidence.
+
+476.--Our envy always lasts longer than the happi-
+ness of those we envy.
+
+477.--The same firmness that enables us to resist
+love enables us to make our resistance durable and
+lasting. So weak persons who are always excited by
+passions are seldom really possessed of any.
+
+478.--Fancy does not enable us to invent so many
+different contradictions as there are by nature in every
+heart.
+
+479.--It is only people who possess firmness who
+can possess true gentleness. In those who appear
+gentle it is generally only weakness, which is readily
+converted into harshness.
+
+480.--Timidity is a fault which is dangerous to
+blame in those we desire to cure of it.
+
+481.--Nothing is rarer than true good nature, those
+who think they have it are generally only pliant or weak.
+
+482.--The mind attaches itself by idleness and habit
+to whatever is easy or pleasant. This habit always places
+bounds to our knowledge, and no one has ever yet
+taken the pains to enlarge and expand his mind to
+the full extent of its capacities.
+
+483.--Usually we are more satirical from vanity
+than malice.
+
+484.--When the heart is still disturbed by the relics
+of a passion it is proner to take up a new one than
+when wholly cured.
+
+485.--Those who have had great passions often find
+all their lives made miserable in being cured of them.
+
+486.--More persons exist without self-love than
+without envy.
+
+["I do not believe that there is a human creature in his
+senses arrived at maturity, that at some time or other has
+not been carried away by this passion (envy) in good
+earnest, and yet I never met with any who dared own he
+was guilty of it, but in jest."--Mandeville: FABLE OF THE
+BEES; Remark N.]
+
+487.--We have more idleness in the mind than in
+the body.
+
+488.--The calm or disturbance of our mind does
+not depend so much on what we regard as the more
+important things of life, as in a judicious or injudicious
+arrangement of the little things of daily occurrence.
+
+489.--However wicked men may be, they do not
+dare openly to appear the enemies of virtue, and when
+they desire to persecute her they either pretend to
+believe her false or attribute crimes to her.
+
+490.--We often go from love to ambition, but we
+never return from ambition to love.
+
+["Men commence by love, finish by ambition, and do
+not find a quieter seat while they remain there."--La
+Bruyere: DU COEUR.]
+
+491.--Extreme avarice is nearly always mistaken,
+there is no passion which is oftener further away from
+its mark, nor upon which the present has so much
+power to the prejudice of the future.
+
+492.--Avarice often produces opposite results: there
+are an infinite number of persons who sacrifice their
+property to doubtful and distant expectations, others
+mistake great future advantages for small present
+interests.
+
+[AIME MARTIN says, "The author here confuses greedi-
+ness, the desire and avarice--passions which probably have
+a common origin, but produce different results. The
+greedy man is nearly always desirous to possess, and often
+foregoes great future advantages for small present interests.
+The avaricious man, on the other hand, mistakes present
+advantages for the great expectations of the future. Both
+desire to possess and enjoy. But the miser possesses and
+enjoys nothing but the pleasure of possessing; he risks
+nothing, gives nothing, hopes nothing, his life is centred
+in his strong box, beyond that he has no want."]
+
+493.--It appears that men do not find they have
+enough faults, as they increase the number by certain
+peculiar qualities that they affect to assume, and
+which they cultivate with so great assiduity that at
+length they become natural faults, which they can no
+longer correct.
+
+494.--What makes us see that men know their
+faults better than we imagine, is that they are never
+wrong when they speak of their conduct; the same
+self-love that usually blinds them enlightens them,
+and gives them such true views as to make them
+suppress or disguise the smallest thing that might be
+censured.
+
+495.--Young men entering life should be either shy
+or bold; a solemn and sedate manner usually de-
+generates into impertinence.
+
+496.--Quarrels would not last long if the fault was
+only on one side.
+
+497.--It is valueless to a woman to be young unless
+pretty, or to be pretty unless young.
+
+498.--Some persons are so frivolous and fickle that
+they are as far removed from real defects as from
+substantial qualities.
+
+499.--We do not usually reckon a woman's first
+flirtation until she has had a second.
+
+500.--Some people are so self-occupied that when
+in love they find a mode by which to be engrossed
+with the passion without being so with the person
+they love.
+
+501.--Love, though so very agreeable, pleases more
+by its ways than by itself.
+
+502.--A little wit with good sense bores less in the
+long run than much wit with ill nature.
+
+503.--Jealousy is the worst of all evils, yet the one
+that is least pitied by those who cause it.
+
+504.--Thus having treated of the hollowness of so
+many apparent virtues, it is but just to say something
+on the hollowness of the contempt for death. I allude
+to that contempt of death which the heathen boasted
+they derived from their unaided understanding, with-
+out the hope of a future state. There is a difference
+between meeting death with courage and despising it.
+The first is common enough, the last I think always
+feigned. Yet everything that could be has been
+written to persuade us that death is no evil, and the
+weakest of men, equally with the bravest, have given
+many noble examples on which to found such an
+opinion, still I do not think that any man of good sense
+has ever yet believed in it. And the pains we take to
+persuade others as well as ourselves amply show that
+the task is far from easy. For many reasons we may
+be disgusted with life, but for none may we despise it.
+Not even those who commit suicide regard it as a
+light matter, and are as much alarmed and startled
+as the rest of the world if death meets them in a dif-
+ferent way than the one they have selected. The differ-
+ence we observe in the courage of so great a number of
+brave men, is from meeting death in a way different
+from what they imagined, when it shows itself nearer at
+one time than at another. Thus it ultimately happens
+that having despised death when they were ignorant
+of it, they dread it when they become acquainted with
+it. If we could avoid seeing it with all its surround-
+ings, we might perhaps believe that it was not the
+greatest of evils. The wisest and bravest are those
+who take the best means to avoid reflecting on it, as
+every man who sees it in its real light regards it as
+dreadful. The necessity of dying created all the con-
+stancy of philosophers. They thought it but right to
+go with a good grace when they could not avoid going,
+and being unable to prolong their lives indefinitely,
+nothing remained but to build an immortal reputation,
+and to save from the general wreck all that could be
+saved. To put a good face upon it, let it suffice, not
+to say all that we think to ourselves, but rely more
+on our nature than on our fallible reason, which might
+make us think we could approach death with indif-
+ference. The glory of dying with courage, the hope
+of being regretted, the desire to leave behind us a
+good reputation, the assurance of being enfranchised
+from the miseries of life and being no longer depend-
+ent on the wiles of fortune, are resources which
+should not be passed over. But we must not regard
+them as infallible. They should affect us in the same
+proportion as a single shelter affects those who in war
+storm a fortress. At a distance they think it may
+afford cover, but when near they find it only a feeble
+protection. It is only deceiving ourselves to imagine
+that death, when near, will seem the same as at
+a distance, or that our feelings, which are merely
+weaknesses, are naturally so strong that they will
+not suffer in an attack of the rudest of trials. It
+is equally as absurd to try the effect of self-esteem
+and to think it will enable us to count as naught
+what will of necessity destroy it. And the mind in
+which we trust to find so many resources will be far
+too weak in the struggle to persuade us in the way we
+wish. For it is this which betrays us so frequently,
+and which, instead of filling us with contempt of death,
+serves but to show us all that is frightful and fearful.
+The most it can do for us is to persuade us to avert
+our gaze and fix it on other objects. Cato and Brutus
+each selected noble ones. A lackey sometime ago
+contented himself by dancing on the scaffold when
+he was about to be broken on the wheel. So however
+diverse the motives they but realize the same result.
+For the rest it is a fact that whatever difference there
+may be between the peer and the peasant, we have
+constantly seen both the one and the other meet death
+with the same composure. Still there is always this
+difference, that the contempt the peer shows for death
+is but the love of fame which hides death from his
+sight; in the peasant it is but the result of his limited
+vision that hides from him the extent of the evil, end
+leaves him free to reflect on other things.
+
+
+
+THE FIRST SUPPLEMENT
+
+[The following reflections are extracted from the first two
+editions of La Rochefoucauld, having been suppressed
+by the author in succeeding issues.]
+
+
+I.--Self-love is the love OF self, and of all things
+FOR self. It makes men self-worshippers, and if for-
+tune permits them, causes them to tyrannize over
+others; it is never quiet when out of itself, and only
+rests upon other subjects as a bee upon flowers, to
+extract from them its proper food. Nothing is so
+headstrong as its desires, nothing so well concealed as
+its designs, nothing so skilful as its management; its
+suppleness is beyond description; its changes surpass
+those of the metamorphoses, its refinements those of
+chemistry. We can neither plumb the depths nor
+pierce the shades of its recesses. Therein it is hidden
+from the most far-seeing eyes, therein it takes a thou-
+sand imperceptible folds. There it is often to itself
+invisible; it there conceives, there nourishes and rears,
+without being aware of it, numberless loves and
+hatreds, some so monstrous that when they are brought
+to light it disowns them, and cannot resolve to avow
+them. In the night which covers it are born the
+ridiculous persuasions it has of itself, thence come its
+errors, its ignorance, its silly mistakes; thence it is
+led to believe that its passions which sleep are dead,
+and to think that it has lost all appetite for that of
+which it is sated. But this thick darkness which con-
+ceals it from itself does not hinder it from seeing that
+perfectly which is out of itself; and in this it re-
+sembles our eyes which behold all, and yet cannot set
+their own forms. In fact, in great concerns and im-
+portant matters when the violence of its desires sum-
+mons all its attention, it sees, feels, hears, imagines,
+suspects, penetrates, divines all: so that we might
+think that each of its passions had a magic power
+proper to it. Nothing is so close and strong as its
+attachments, which, in sight of the extreme misfor-
+tunes which threaten it, it vainly attempts to break.
+Yet sometimes it effects that without trouble and
+quickly, which it failed to do with its whole power
+and in the course of years, whence we may fairly con-
+clude that it is by itself that its desires are inflamed,
+rather than by the beauty and merit of its objects,
+that its own taste embellishes and heightens them;
+that it is itself the game it pursues, and that it follows
+eagerly when it runs after that upon which itself is
+eager. It is made up of contraries. It is imperious and
+obedient, sincere and false, piteous and cruel, timid
+and bold. It has different desires according to the
+diversity of temperaments, which turn and fix it some-
+times upon riches, sometimes on pleasures. It changes
+according to our age, our fortunes, and our hopes;
+it is quite indifferent whether it has many or one,
+because it can split itself into many portions, and
+unite in one as it pleases. It is inconstant, and besides
+the changes which arise from strange causes it has
+an infinity born of itself, and of its own substance.
+It is inconstant through inconstancy, of lightness,
+love, novelty, lassitude and distaste. It is capricious,
+and one sees it sometimes work with intense eager-
+ness and with incredible labour to obtain things of
+little use to it which are even hurtful, but which it
+pursues because it wishes for them. It is silly, and
+often throws its whole application on the utmost
+frivolities. It finds all its pleasure in the dullest
+matters, and places its pride in the most contemptible.
+It is seen in all states of life, and in all conditions; it
+lives everywhere and upon everything; it subsists on
+nothing; it accommodates itself either to things or to
+the want of them; it goes over to those who are at war
+with it, enters into their designs, and, this is wonderful,
+it, with them, hates even itself; it conspires for its own
+loss, it works towards its own ruin--in fact, caring only
+to exist, and providing that it may BE, it will be its own
+enemy! We must therefore not be surprised if it is
+sometimes united to the rudest austerity, and if it
+enters so boldly into partnership to destroy her,
+because when it is rooted out in one place it re-esta-
+blishes itself in another. When it fancies that it
+abandons its pleasure it merely changes or suspends
+its enjoyment. When even it is conquered in its full
+flight, we find that it triumphs in its own defeat.
+Here then is the picture of self-love whereof the whole
+of our life is but one long agitation. The sea is its
+living image; and in the flux and reflux of its con-
+tinuous waves there is a faithful expression of the
+stormy succession of its thoughts and of its eternal
+motion. (Edition of 1665, No. 1.)
+
+II.--Passions are only the different degrees of the
+heat or coldness of the blood. (1665, No. 13.)
+
+III.--Moderation in good fortune is but apprehen-
+sion of the shame which follows upon haughtiness, or
+a fear of losing what we have. (1665, No. 18.)
+
+IV.--Moderation is like temperance in eating; we
+could eat more but we fear to make ourselves ill.
+(1665, No. 21.)
+
+V.--Everybody finds that to abuse in another which
+he finds worthy of abuse in himself. (1665, No. 33.)
+
+VI.--Pride, as if tired of its artifices and its different
+metamorphoses, after having solely filled the divers
+parts of the comedy of life, exhibits itself with
+its natural face, and is discovered by haughtiness; so
+much so that we may truly say that haughtiness is but
+the flash and open declaration of pride. (1665, No. 37.)
+
+VII.--One kind of happiness is to know exactly at
+what point to be miserable. (1665, No. 53.)
+
+VIII.--When we do not find peace of mind (REPOS)
+in ourselves it is useless to seek it elsewhere. (1665,
+No. 53.)
+
+IX.--One should be able to answer for one's fortune,
+so as to be able to answer for what we shall do. (1665,
+No. 70.)
+
+X.--Love is to the soul of him who loves, what the
+soul is to the body which it animates. (1665, No. 77.)
+
+XI.--As one is never at liberty to love or to cease
+from loving, the lover cannot with justice complain
+of the inconstancy of his mistress, nor she of the
+fickleness of her lover. (1665, No. 81.)
+
+XII.--Justice in those judges who are moderate
+is but a love of their place. (1665, No. 89.)
+
+XIII.--When we are tired of loving we are quite
+content if our mistress should become faithless, to loose
+us from our fidelity. (1665, No. 85.)
+
+XIV.--The first impulse of joy which we feel at the
+happiness of our friends arises neither from our
+natural goodness nor from friendship; it is the result
+of self-love, which flatters us with being lucky in
+our own turn, or in reaping something from the good
+fortune of our friends. (1665, No. 97.)
+
+XV.--In the adversity of our best friends we
+always find something which is not wholly displeasing
+to us. (1665, No. 99.)
+
+[This gave occasion to Swift's celebrated "Verses on his
+own Death." The four first are quoted opposite the title,
+then follow these lines:--
+ "This maxim more than all the rest,
+ Is thought too base for human breast;
+ In all distresses of our friends,
+ We first consult our private ends;
+ While nature kindly bent to ease us,
+ Points out some circumstance to please us."
+
+See also Chesterfield's defence of this in his 129th letter;
+"they who know the deception and wickedness of the
+human heart will not be either romantic or blind enough to
+deny what Rochefoucauld and Swift have affirmed as a
+general truth."]
+
+XVI.--How shall we hope that another person will
+keep our secret if we do not keep it ourselves. (1665,
+No. 100.)
+
+XVII.--As if it was not sufficient that self-love
+should have the power to change itself, it has added
+that of changing other objects, and this it does in a
+very astonishing manner; for not only does it so well
+disguise them that it is itself deceived, but it even
+changes the state and nature of things. Thus, when
+a female is adverse to us, and she turns her hate
+and persecution against us, self-love pronounces
+on her actions with all the severity of justice;
+it exaggerates the faults till they are enormous,
+and looks at her good qualities in so disadvan-
+tageous a light that they become more displeasing than
+her faults. If however the same female becomes
+favourable to us, or certain of our interests reconcile
+her to us, our sole self interest gives her back the
+lustre which our hatred deprived her of. The bad
+qualities become effaced, the good ones appear with
+a redoubled advantage; we even summon all our
+indulgence to justify the war she has made upon us.
+Now although all passions prove this truth, that of
+love exhibits it most clearly; for we may see a
+lover moved with rage by the neglect or the infidelity
+of her whom he loves, and meditating the utmost
+vengeance that his passion can inspire. Nevertheless
+as soon as the sight of his beloved has calmed the
+fury of his movements, his passion holds that beauty
+innocent; he only accuses himself, he condemns his
+condemnations, and by the miraculous power of self-
+love, he whitens the blackest actions of his mistress,
+and takes from her all crime to lay it on himself.
+
+{No date or number is given for this maxim}
+
+XVIII.--There are none who press so heavily on
+others as the lazy ones, when they have satisfied their
+idleness, and wish to appear industrious. (1666,
+No. 91.)
+
+XIX.--The blindness of men is the most dangerous
+effect of their pride; it seems to nourish and augment
+it, it deprives us of knowledge of remedies which can
+solace our miseries and can cure our faults. (1665,
+No. 102.)
+
+XX.--One has never less reason than when one
+despairs of finding it in others. (1665, No. 103.)
+
+XXI.--Philosophers, and Seneca above all, have not
+diminished crimes by their precepts; they have only
+used them in the building up of pride. (1665, No. 105.)
+
+XXII.--It is a proof of little friendship not to per-
+ceive the growing coolness of that of our friends.
+(1666, No. 97.)
+
+XXIII.--The most wise may be so in indifferent and
+ordinary matters, but they are seldom so in their
+most serious affairs. (1665, No. 132.)
+
+XXIV.--The most subtle folly grows out of the most
+subtle wisdom. (1665, No. 134.)
+
+XXV.--Sobriety is the love of health, or an in-
+capacity to eat much. (l665, No. 135.)
+
+XXVI.--We never forget things so well as when we
+are tired of talking of them. (1665, No. 144.)
+
+XXVII.--The praise bestowed upon us is at least
+useful in rooting us in the practice of virtue. (1665,
+No. 155.)
+
+XXVIII.--Self-love takes care to prevent him whom
+we flatter from being him who most flatters us. (1665,
+No. 157.)
+
+XXIX.--Men only blame vice and praise virtue
+from interest. (1665, No. 151.)
+
+XXX.--We make no difference in the kinds of anger,
+although there is that which is light and almost inno-
+cent, which arises from warmth of complexion, tem-
+perament, and another very criminal, which is, to
+speak properly, the fury of pride. (1665, No. 159.)
+
+XXXI.--Great souls are not those who have fewer
+passions and more virtues than the common, but
+those only who have greater designs. (1665, No. 161.)
+
+XXXII.--Kings do with men as with pieces of
+money; they make them bear what value they will,
+and one is forced to receive them according to their
+currency value, and not at their true worth. (1665,
+No. 165.)
+
+[See Burns{, FOR A' THAT AN A' THAT}--
+ "The rank is but the guinea's stamp,
+ {The} man's {the gowd} for a' that."
+Also Farquhar and other parallel passages pointed out in
+FAMILIAR WORDS.]
+
+XXXIII.--Natural ferocity makes fewer people
+cruel than self-love. (1665, No. 174.)
+
+XXXIV.--One may say of all our virtues as an
+Italian poet says of the propriety of women, that it
+is often merely the art of appearing chaste. (1665,
+No. 176.)
+
+XXXV.--There are crimes which become innocent
+and even glorious by their brilliancy,* their number, or
+their excess; thus it happens that public robbery is
+called financial skill, and the unjust capture of pro-
+vinces is called a conquest. (1665, No. 192.)
+
+*<Some crimes may be excused by their brilliancy, such
+as those of Jael, of Deborah, of Brutus, and of Charlotte
+Corday--further than this the maxim is satire.>
+
+XXXVI.--One never finds in man good or evil in
+excess. (1665, No. 201.)
+
+XXXVII.--Those who are incapable of committing
+great crimes do not easily suspect others. (1665,
+No. {2}08.)
+
+{The text incorrectly numbers this maxim as 508. It
+is 208.}
+
+XXXVIII.--The pomp of funerals concerns rather
+the vanity of the living, than the honour of the
+dead. (1665, No. 213.)
+
+XXXIX.--Whatever variety and change appears in
+the world, we may remark a secret chain, and a regu-
+lated order of all time by Providence, which makes
+everything follow in due rank and fall into its de-
+stined course. (1665, No. 225.)
+
+XL.--Intrepidity should sustain the heart in con-
+spiracies in place of valour which alone furnishes all
+the firmness which is necessary for the perils of war.
+(1665, No. 231.)
+
+XLI.--Those who wish to define victory by her birth
+will be tempted to imitate the poets, and to call her
+the Daughter of Heaven, since they cannot find her
+origin on earth. Truly she is produced from an
+infinity of actions, which instead of wishing to beget
+her, only look to the particular interests of their
+masters, since all those who compose an army, in
+aiming at their own rise and glory, produce a good
+so great and general. (1665, No. 232.)
+
+XLII.--That man who has never been in danger
+cannot answer for his courage. (1665, No. 236.)
+
+XLIII.--We more often place bounds on our grati-
+tude than on our desires and our hopes. (1665, No.
+241.)
+
+XLIV.--Imitation is always unhappy, for all which
+is counterfeit displeases by the very things which
+charm us when they are original (NATURELLES). (1665,
+No. 245.)
+
+XLV.--We do not regret the loss of our friends ac-
+cording to THEIR merits, but according to OUR wants,
+and the opinion with which we believed we had im-
+pressed them of our worth. (1665, No. 248.)
+
+XLVI.--It is very hard to separate the general
+goodness spread all over the world from great clever-
+ness. (1665, No. 252.)
+
+XLVII.--For us to be always good, others should
+believe that they cannot behave wickedly to us with
+impunity. (1665, No. 254.)
+
+XLVIII.--A confidence in being able to please is
+often an infallible means of being displeasing. (1665,
+No. 256.)
+
+XLIX.--The confidence we have in ourselves arises
+in a great measure from that that we have in others.
+(1665, No. 258.)
+
+L.--There is a general revolution which changes
+the tastes of the mind as well as the fortunes of the
+world. (1665, No. 250.)
+
+LI.--Truth is foundation and the reason of the per-
+fection of beauty, for of whatever stature a thing may
+be, it cannot be beautiful and perfect unless it be
+truly that she should be, and possess truly all that she
+should have (1665, No. 260.)
+
+[Beauty is truth, truth beauty.{--John Keats, "Ode on a
+a Grecian Urn," (1820), Stanza 5}]
+
+LII.--There are fine things which are more bril-
+liant when unfinished than when finished too much.
+(1665, No. 262.)
+
+LIII.--Magnanimity is a noble effort of pride which
+makes a man master of himself, to make him master
+of all things. (1665, No. 271.)
+
+LIV.--Luxury and too refined a policy in states are
+a sure presage of their fall, because all parties looking
+after their own interest turn away from the public
+good. (1665, No. 282.)
+
+LV.--Of all passions that which is least known to
+us is idleness; she is the most ardent and evil of all,
+although her violence may be insensible, and the evils
+she causes concealed; if we consider her power
+attentively we shall find that in all encounters she
+makes herself mistress of our sentiments, our in-
+terests, and our pleasures; like the (fabled) Remora,
+she can stop the greatest vessels, she is a hidden rock,
+more dangerous in the most important matters than
+sudden squalls and the most violent tempests. The
+repose of idleness is a magic charm which suddenly
+suspends the most ardent pursuits and the most
+obstinate resolutions. In fact to give a true notion of
+this passion we must add that idleness, like a beati-
+tude of the soul, consoles us for all losses and fills the
+vacancy of all our wants. (1665, No. 290.)
+
+LVI.--We are very fond of reading others' characters,
+but we do not like to be read ourselves. (1665, No. 296.)
+
+LVII.--What a tiresome malady is that which forces
+one to preserve your health by a severe regimen.
+(IBID, No. 298.)
+
+LVIII.--It is much easier to take love when one is
+free, than to get rid of it after having taken it. (1665,
+No. 300.)
+
+LIX.--Women for the most part surrender them-
+selves more from weakness than from passion. Whence
+it is that bold and pushing men succeed better than
+others, although they are not so loveable. (1665, No.
+301.)
+
+LX.--Not to love is in love, an infallible means of
+being beloved. (1665, No. 302.)
+
+LXI.--The sincerity which lovers and mistresses ask
+that both should know when they cease to love each
+other, arises much less from a wish to be warned of
+the cessation of love, than from a desire to be assured
+that they are beloved although no one denies it.
+(1665, No. 303.)
+
+LXII.--The most just comparison of love is that of
+a fever, and we have no power over either, as to its
+violence or its duration. (1665, No. 305.)
+
+LXIII.--The greatest skill of the least skilful is to
+know how to submit to the direction of another.
+(1665, No. 309.)
+
+LXIV.--We always fear to see those whom we love
+when we have been flirting with others. (16{74}, No.
+372.)
+
+LXV.--We ought to console ourselves for our faults
+when we have strength enough to own them. (16{74},
+No. 375.)
+
+{The date of the previous two maxims is incorrectly cited
+as 1665 in the text. I found this date immediately suspect
+because the translators' introduction states that the 1665
+edition only had 316 maxims. In fact, the two maxims only
+appeared in the fourth of the first five editions (1674).}
+
+
+
+SECOND SUPPLEMENT.
+
+REFLECTIONS,
+EXTRACTED FROM
+MS. LETTERS IN THE ROYAL LIBRARY.*
+
+*<A LA BIBLIOTHEQUE DU ROI, it is difficult at present
+(June 1871) to assign a name to the magnificent collection
+of books in Paris, the property of the nation.>
+
+
+LXVI.--Interest is the soul of self-love, in as much
+as when the body deprived of its soul is without sight,
+feeling or knowledge, without thought or movement,
+so self-love, riven so to speak from its interest, neither
+sees, nor hears, nor smells, nor moves; thus it is that
+the same man who will run over land and sea for his
+own interest becomes suddenly paralyzed when en-
+gaged for that of others; from this arises that sudden
+dulness and, as it were, death, with which we afflict
+those to whom we speak of our own matters; from this
+also their sudden resurrection when in our narrative
+we relate something concerning them; from this we
+find in our conversations and business that a man
+becomes dull or bright just as his own interest is near
+to him or distant from him. (LETTER TO MADAME DE
+SABLE, MS., FOL. 211.)
+
+LXVII.--Why we cry out so much against maxims
+which lay bare the heart of man, is because we fear
+that our own heart shall be laid bare. (MAXIM 103,
+MS., fol. 310.*)
+
+*<The reader will recognise in these extracts portions of the
+Maxims previously given, sometimes the author has care-
+fully polished them; at other times the words are identical.
+Our numbers will indicate where they are to be found in
+the foregoing collection.>
+
+LXVIII.--Hope and fear are inseparable. (TO
+MADAME DE SABLE, MS., FOL. 222, MAX. 168.)
+
+LXIX.--It is a common thing to hazard life to escape
+dishonour; but, when this is done, the actor takes
+very little pain to make the enterprise succeed in
+which he is engaged, and certain it is that they who
+hazard their lives to take a city or to conquer a pro-
+vince are better officers, have more merit, and wider
+and more useful, views than they who merely expose
+themselves to vindicate their honour; it is very com-
+mon to find people of the latter class, very rare to
+find those of the former. (LETTER TO M. ESPRIT, MS.,
+FOL. 173, MAX. 219.)
+
+LXX.--The taste changes, but the will remains the
+same. (TO MADAME DE SABLE, FOL. 223, MAX. 252.)
+
+LXXI.--The power which women whom we love
+have over us is greater than that which we have over
+ourselves. (TO THE SAME, MS., FOL. 211, MAX. 259)
+
+LXXII.--That which makes us believe so easily that
+others have defects is that we all so easily believe
+what we wish. (TO THE SAME, MS., FOL. 223, MAX. 397.)
+
+LXXIII.--I am perfectly aware that good sense and
+fine wit are tedious to every age, but tastes are not
+always the same, and what is good at one time will
+not seem so at another. This makes me think that
+few persons know how to be old. (TO THE SAME,
+FOL. 202, MAX. 423.)
+
+LXXIV.--God has permitted, to punish man for his
+original sin, that he should be so fond of his self-love,
+that he should be tormented by it in all the actions
+of his life. (MS., FOL. 310, MAX. 494.)
+
+LXXV.--And so far it seems to me the philosophy
+of a lacquey can go; I believe that all gaity in that state
+of life is very doubtful indeed. (TO MADAME DE SABLE,
+FOL. 161, MAX. 504.)
+
+[In the maxim cited the author relates how a footman
+about to be broken on the wheel danced on the scaffold.
+He seems to think that in his day the life of such servants
+was so miserable that their merriment was very doubtful.]
+
+
+
+THIRD SUPPLEMENT
+
+[The fifty following Maxims are taken from the Sixth
+Edition of the PENSEES DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, published
+by Claude Barbin, in 1693, more than twelve years after
+the death of the author (17th May, 1680). The reader
+will find some repetitions, but also some very valuable
+maxims.]
+
+
+LXXVI.--Many persons wish to be devout; but
+no one wishes to be humble.
+
+LXXVII.--The labour of the body frees us from
+the pains of the mind, and thus makes the poor happy.
+
+LXXVIII.--True penitential sorrows (mortifica-
+tions) are those which are not known, vanity renders
+the others easy enough.
+
+LXXIX.--Humility is the altar upon which God
+wishes that we should offer him his sacrifices.
+
+LXXX.--Few things are needed to make a wise man
+happy; nothing can make a fool content; that is why
+most men are miserable.
+
+LXXXI.--We trouble ourselves less to become
+happy, than to make others believe we are so.
+
+LXXXII.--It is more easy to extinguish the first
+desire than to satisfy those which follow.
+
+LXXXIII.--Wisdom is to the soul what health is to
+the body.
+
+LXXXIV.--The great ones of the earth can neither
+command health of body nor repose of mind, and
+they buy always at too dear a price the good they can
+acquire.
+
+LXXXV.--Before strongly desiring anything we
+should examine what happiness he has who possesses it.
+
+LXXXVI.--A true friend is the greatest of all
+goods, and that of which we think least of acquiring.
+
+LXXXVII.--Lovers do not wish to see the faults of
+their mistresses until their enchantment is at an end.
+
+LXXXVIII.--Prudence and love are not made for
+each other; in the ratio that love increases, prudence
+diminishes.
+
+LXXXIX.--It is sometimes pleasing to a husband
+to have a jealous wife; he hears her always speaking
+of the beloved object.
+
+XC.--How much is a woman to be pitied who is at
+the same time possessed of virtue and love!
+
+XCI.--The wise man finds it better not to enter
+the encounter than to conquer.
+
+[Somewhat similar to Goldsmith's sage--
+ "Who quits {a} world where strong temptations try,
+ And since 'tis hard to co{mbat}, learns to fly."]
+
+XCII.--It is more necessary to study men than
+books.
+
+["The proper study of mankind is man."--Pope
+{ESSAY ON MAN, (1733), EPISTLE II, line 2}.]
+
+XCIII.--Good and evil ordinarily come to those who
+have most of one or the other.
+
+XCIV.--The accent and character of one's native
+country dwells in the mind and heart as on the tongue.
+(REPITITION OF MAXIM 342.)
+
+XCV.--The greater part of men have qualities
+which, like those of plants, are discovered by chance.
+(REPITITION OF MAXIM 344.)
+
+XCVI.--A good woman is a hidden treasure; he
+who discovers her will do well not to boast about it.
+(SEE MAXIM 368.)
+
+XCVII.--Most women do not weep for the loss
+of a lover to show that they have been loved so much
+as to show that they are worth being loved. (SEE
+MAXIM 362.)
+
+XCVIII.--There are many virtuous women who
+are weary of the part they have played. (SEE MAXIM
+367.)
+
+XCIX.--If we think we love for love's sake we
+are much mistaken. (SEE MAXIM 374.)
+
+C.--The restraint we lay upon ourselves to be con-
+stant, is not much better than an inconstancy. (SEE
+MAXIMS 369, 381.)
+
+CI.--There are those who avoid our jealousy, of
+whom we ought to be jealous. (SEE MAXIM 359.)
+
+CII.--Jealousy is always born with love, but does
+not always die with it. (SEE MAXIM 361.)
+
+CIII.--When we love too much it is difficult to
+discover when we have ceased to be beloved.
+
+CIV.--We know very well that we should not talk
+about our wives, but we do not remember that it is
+not so well to speak of ourselves. (SEE MAXIM 364.)
+
+CV.--Chance makes us known to others and to our-
+selves. (SEE MAXIM 345.)
+
+CVI.--We find very few people of good sense, ex-
+cept those who are of our own opinion. (SEE MAXIM
+347.)
+
+CVII.--We commonly praise the good hearts of
+those who admire us. (SEE MAXIM 356.)
+
+CVIII.--Man only blames himself in order that he
+may be praised.
+
+CIX.--Little minds are wounded by the smallest
+things. (SEE MAXIM 357.)
+
+CX.--There are certain faults which placed in a good
+light please more than perfection itself. (SEE MAXIM
+354.)
+
+CXI.--That which makes us so bitter against those
+who do us a shrewd turn, is because they think them-
+selves more clever than we are. (SEE MAXIM 350.)
+
+CXII.--We are always bored by those whom we
+bore. (SEE MAXIM 352.)
+
+CXIII.--The harm that others do us is often less
+than that we do ourselves. (SEE MAXIM 363.)
+
+CXIV.--It is never more difficult to speak well
+than when we are ashamed of being silent.
+
+CXV.--Those faults are always pardonable that we
+have the courage to avow.
+
+CXVI.--The greatest fault of penetration is not
+that it goes to the bottom of a matter--but beyond it.
+(SEE MAXIM 377.)
+
+CXVII.--We give advice, but we cannot give the
+wisdom to profit by it. (SEE MAXIM 378.)
+
+CXVIII.--When our merit declines, our taste de-
+clines also. (SEE MAXIM 379.)
+
+CXIX.--Fortune discovers our vices and our vir-
+tues, as the light makes objects plain to the sight.
+(SEE MAXIM 380.)
+
+CXX.--Our actions are like rhymed verse-ends
+(BOUTS-RIMES) which everyone turns as he pleases. (SEE
+MAXIM 382.)
+
+CXXI.--There is nothing more natural, nor more
+deceptive, than to believe that we are beloved.
+
+CXXII.--We would rather see those to whom we
+have done a benefit, than those who have done us one.
+
+CXXIII.--It is more difficult to hide the opinions
+we have than to feign those which we have not.
+
+CXXIV.--Renewed friendships require more care
+than those that have never been broken.
+
+CXXV.--A man to whom no one is pleasing is
+much more unhappy than one who pleases nobody.
+
+
+
+REFLECTIONS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS,
+BY THE
+DUKE DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
+
+
+I. On Confidence.
+
+
+Though sincerity and confidence have many
+points of resemblance, they have yet many
+points of difference.
+
+Sincerity is an openness of heart, which
+shows us what we are, a love of truth, a dis-
+like to deception, a wish to compensate our faults and
+to lessen them by the merit of confessing them.
+
+Confidence leaves us less liberty, its rules are
+stricter, it requires more prudence and reticence, and
+we are not always free to give it. It relates not only
+to ourselves, since our interests are often mixed up
+with those of others; it requires great delicacy not to
+expose our friends in exposing ourselves, not to draw
+upon their goodness to enhance the value of what we
+give.
+
+Confidence always pleases those who receive it. It
+is a tribute we pay to their merit, a deposit we commit
+to their trust, a pledge which gives them a claim upon
+us, a kind of dependence to which we voluntarily
+submit. I do not wish from what I have said to
+depreciate confidence, so necessary to man. It is
+in society the link between acquaintance and
+friendship. I only wish to state its limits to make
+it true and real. I would that it was always sincere,
+always discreet, and that it had neither weakness nor
+interest. I know it is hard to place proper limits on
+being taken into all our friends' confidence, and taking
+them into all ours.
+
+Most frequently we make confidants from vanity, a
+love of talking, a wish to win the confidence of others,
+and make an exchange of secrets.
+
+Some may have a motive for confiding in us, towards
+whom we have no motive for confiding. With them we
+discharge the obligation in keeping their secrets and
+trusting them with small confidences.
+
+Others whose fidelity we know trust nothing to
+us, but we confide in them by choice and inclina-
+tion.
+
+We should hide from them nothing that concerns
+us, we should always show them with equal truth, our
+virtues and our vices, without exaggerating the one
+or diminishing the other. We should make it a rule
+never to have half confidences. They always embarrass
+those who give them, and dissatisfy those who receive
+them. They shed an uncertain light on what we want
+hidden, increase curiosity, entitling the recipients to
+know more, giving them leave to consider themselves
+free to talk of what they have guessed. It is far
+safer and more honest to tell nothing than to be
+silent when we have begun to tell. There are other
+rules to be observed in matters confided to us, all are
+important, to all prudence and trust are essential.
+
+Everyone agrees that a secret should be kept intact,
+but everyone does not agree as to the nature and
+importance of secresy. Too often we consult our-
+selves as to what we should say, what we should leave
+unsaid. There are few permanent secrets, and the
+scruple against revealing them will not last for ever.
+
+With those friends whose truth we know we have
+the closest intimacy. They have always spoken unre-
+servedly to us, we should always do the same to them.
+They know our habits and connexions, and see too
+clearly not to perceive the slightest change. They
+may have elsewhere learnt what we have promised not
+to tell. It is not in our power to tell them what has
+been entrusted to us, though it might tend to their
+interest to know it. We feel as confident of them
+as of ourselves, and we are reduced to the hard fate of
+losing their friendship, which is dear to us, or of being
+faithless as regards a secret. This is doubtless the
+hardest test of fidelity, but it should not move an
+honest man; it is then that he can sacrifice himself
+to others. His first duty is to rigidly keep his trust
+in its entirety. He should not only control and
+guard his and his voice, but even his lighter
+talk, so that nothing be seen in his conversation or
+manner that could direct the curiosity of others towards
+that which he wishes to conceal.
+
+We have often need of strength and prudence
+wherewith to oppose the exigencies of most of our
+friends who make a claim on our confidence, and
+seek to know all about us. We should never allow
+them to acquire this unexceptionable right. There
+are accidents and circumstances which do not fall in
+their cognizance; if they complain, we should endure
+their complaints and excuse ourselves with gentleness,
+but if they are still unreasonable, we should sacrifice
+their friendship to our duty, and choose between two
+inevitable evils, the one reparable, the other irre-
+parable.
+
+
+II. On Difference of Character.
+
+
+Although all the qualities of mind may be united in
+a great genius, yet there are some which are special
+and peculiar to him; his views are unlimited; he
+always acts uniformly and with the same activity;
+he sees distant objects as if present; he compre-
+hends and grasps the greatest, sees and notices the
+smallest matters; his thoughts are elevated, broad,
+just and intelligible. Nothing escapes his observation,
+and he often finds truth in spite of the obscurity that
+hides her from others.
+
+A lofty mind always thinks nobly, it easily creates
+vivid, agreeable, and natural fancies, places them in
+their best light, clothes them with all appropriate
+adornments, studies others' tastes, and clears away
+from its own thoughts all that is useless and dis-
+agreeable.
+
+A clever, pliant, winning mind knows how to avoid
+and overcome difficulties. Bending easily to what it
+wants, it understands the inclination and temper it is
+dealing with, and by managing their interests it
+advances and establishes its own.
+
+A well regulated mind sees all things as they should
+be seen, appraises them at their proper value, turns
+them to its own advantage, and adheres firmly to its
+own opinions as it knows all their force and weight.
+
+A difference exists between a working mind and a
+business-like mind. We can undertake business with-
+out turning it to our own interest. Some are clever
+only in what does not concern them, and the reverse
+in all that does. There are others again whose
+cleverness is limited to their own business, and who
+know how to turn everything to their own advantage.
+
+It is possible to have a serious turn of mind, and
+yet to talk pleasantly and cheerfully. This class of
+mind is suited to all persons in all times of life.
+Young persons have usually a cheerful and satirical
+turn, untempered by seriousness, thus often making
+themselves disagreeable.
+
+No part is easier to play than that of being always
+pleasant; and the applause we sometimes receive in
+censuring others is not worth being exposed to the
+chance of offending them when they are out of
+temper.
+
+Satire is at once the most agreeable and most dan-
+gerous of mental qualities. It always pleases when it
+is refined, but we always fear those who use it too
+much, yet satire should be allowed when unmixed
+with spite, and when the person satirised can join in
+the satire.
+
+It is unfortunate to have a satirical turn without
+affecting to be pleased or without loving to jest. It
+requires much adroitness to continue satirical with-
+out falling into one of these extremes.
+
+Raillery is a kind of mirth which takes possession
+of the imagination, and shows every object in an
+absurd light; wit combines more or less softness or
+harshness.
+
+There is a kind of refined and flattering raillery that
+only hits the faults that persons admit, which under-
+stands how to hide the praise it gives under the ap-
+pearance of blame, and shows the good while feigning
+a wish to hide it.
+
+An acute mind and a cunning mind are very dis-
+similar. The first always pleases; it is unfettered, it
+perceives the most delicate and sees the most impercep-
+tible matters. A cunning spirit never goes straight, it
+endeavours to secure its object by byeways and short
+cuts. This conduct is soon found out, it always gives
+rise to distrust and never reaches greatness.
+
+There is a difference between an ardent and a
+brilliant mind, a fiery spirit travels further and faster,
+while a brilliant mind is sparkling, attractive, accu-
+rate.
+
+Gentleness of mind is an easy and accommodating
+manner which always pleases when not insipid.
+
+A mind full of details devotes itself to the manage-
+ment and regulation of the smallest particulars it
+meets with. This distinction is usually limited to
+little matters, yet it is not absolutely incompatible
+with greatness, and when these two qualities are
+united in the same mind they raise it infinitely above
+others.
+
+The expression "BEL ESPRIT" is much perverted, for
+all that one can say of the different kinds of mind
+meet together in the "BEL ESPRIT." Yet as the epithet
+is bestowed on an infinite number of bad poets and
+tedious authors, it is more often used to ridicule than
+to praise.
+
+There are yet many other epithets for the mind
+which mean the same thing, the difference lies in the
+tone and manner of saying them, but as tones and
+manner cannot appear in writing I shall not go into
+distinctions I cannot explain. Custom explains this
+in saying that a man has wit, has much wit, that he
+is a great wit; there are tones and manners which
+make all the difference between phrases which seem
+all alike on paper, and yet express a different order of
+mind.
+
+So we say that a man has only one kind of wit, that
+he has several, that he has every variety of wit.
+
+One can be a fool with much wit, and one need not
+be a fool even with very little wit.
+
+To have much mind is a doubtful expression. It
+may mean every class of mind that can be mentioned,
+it may mean none in particular. It may mean that
+he talks sensibly while he acts foolishly. We may
+have a mind, but a narrow one. A mind may be
+fitted for some things, not for others. We may have
+a large measure of mind fitted for nothing, and one is
+often inconvenienced with much mind; still of this
+kind of mind we may say that it is sometimes pleasing
+in society.
+
+Though the gifts of the mind are infinite, they can,
+it seems to me, be thus classified.
+
+There are some so beautiful that everyone can see
+and feel their beauty.
+
+There are some lovely, it is true, but which are
+wearisome.
+
+There are some which are lovely, which all the
+world admire, but without knowing why.
+
+There are some so refined and delicate that few are
+capable even of remarking all their beauties.
+
+There are others which, though imperfect, yet are
+produced with such skill, and sustained and managed
+with such sense and grace, that they even deserve to
+be admired.
+
+
+III. On Taste.
+
+
+Some persons have more wit than taste, others have
+more taste than wit. There is greater vanity and
+caprice in taste than in wit.
+
+The word taste has different meanings, which it is
+easy to mistake. There is a difference between the
+taste which in certain objects has an attraction for
+us, and the taste that makes us understand and
+distinguish the qualities we judge by.
+
+We may like a comedy without having a sufficiently
+fine and delicate taste to criticise it accurately. Some
+tastes lead us imperceptibly to objects, from which
+others carry us away by their force or intensity.
+
+Some persons have bad taste in everything, others
+have bad taste only in some things, but a correct and
+good taste in matters within their capacity. Some
+have peculiar taste, which they know to be bad, but
+which they still follow. Some have a doubtful taste,
+and let chance decide, their indecision makes them
+change, and they are affected with pleasure or weari-
+ness on their friends' judgment. Others are always
+prejudiced, they are the slaves of their tastes, which
+they adhere to in everything. Some know what is
+good, and are horrified at what is not; their opinions
+are clear and true, and they find the reason for their
+taste in their mind and understanding.
+
+Some have a species of instinct (the source of which
+they are ignorant of), and decide all questions that
+come before them by its aid, and always decide
+rightly.
+
+These follow their taste more than their intelligence,
+because they do not permit their temper and self-love
+to prevail over their natural discernment. All they
+do is in harmony, all is in the same spirit. This
+harmony makes them decide correctly on matters, and
+form a correct estimate of their value. But speaking
+generally there are few who have a taste fixed and
+independent of that of their friends, they follow
+example and fashion which generally form the stand-
+ard of taste.
+
+In all the diversities of taste that we discern, it is
+very rare and almost impossible to meet with that sort
+of good taste that knows how to set a price on the
+particular, and yet understands the right value that
+should be placed on all. Our knowledge is too limited,
+and that correct discernment of good qualities which
+goes to form a correct judgment is too seldom to be
+met with except in regard to matters that do not
+concern us.
+
+As regards ourselves our taste has not this all-
+important discernment. Preoccupation, trouble, all
+that concern us, present it to us in another aspect.
+We do not see with the same eyes what does and
+what does not relate to us. Our taste is guided by
+the bent of our self-love and temper, which supplies
+us with new views which we adapt to an infinite
+number of changes and uncertainties. Our taste is
+no longer our own, we cease to control it, without our
+consent it changes, and the same objects appear to us
+in such divers aspects that ultimately we fail to per-
+ceive what we have seen and heard.
+
+
+IV. On Society.
+
+
+In speaking of society my plan is not to speak of
+friendship, for, though they have some connection,
+they are yet very different. The former has more
+in it of greatness and humility, and the greatest
+merit of the latter is to resemble the former.
+
+For the present I shall speak of that particular
+kind of intercourse that gentlemen should have with
+each other. It would be idle to show how far society
+is essential to men: all seek for it, and all find it, but
+few adopt the method of making it pleasant and
+lasting.
+
+Everyone seeks to find his pleasure and his advan-
+tage at the expense of others. We prefer ourselves
+always to those with whom we intend to live, and
+they almost always perceive the preference. It is
+this which disturbs and destroys society. We should
+discover a means to hide this love of selection since it
+is too ingrained in us to be in our power to destroy.
+We should make our pleasure that of other persons, to
+humour, never to wound their self-love.
+
+The mind has a great part to do in so great a work,
+but it is not merely sufficient for us to guide it in the
+different courses it should hold.
+
+The agreement we meet between minds would not
+keep society together for long if she was not governed
+and sustained by good sense, temper, and by the con-
+sideration which ought to exist between persons who
+have to live together.
+
+It sometimes happens that persons opposite in tem-
+per and mind become united. They doubtless hold
+together for different reasons, which cannot last for
+long. Society may subsist between those who are our
+inferiors by birth or by personal qualities, but those
+who have these advantages should not abuse them.
+They should seldom let it be perceived that they
+serve to instruct others. They should let their con-
+duct show that they, too, have need to be guided and
+led by reason, and accommodate themselves as far as
+possible to the feeling and the interests of the others.
+
+To make society pleasant, it is essential that each
+should retain his freedom of action. A man should
+not see himself, or he should see himself without
+dependence, and at the same time amuse himself. He
+should have the power of separating himself without
+that separation bringing any change on the society.
+He should have the power to pass by one and the
+other, if he does not wish to expose himself to occa-
+sional embarrassments; and he should remember that
+he is often bored when he believes he has not the
+power even to bore. He should share in what he
+believes to be the amusement of persons with whom
+he wishes to live, but he should not always be liable
+to the trouble of providing them.
+
+Complaisance is essential in society, but it should
+have its limits, it becomes a slavery when it is extreme.
+We should so render a free consent, that in following
+the opinion of our friends they should believe that they
+follow ours.
+
+We should readily excuse our friends when their
+faults are born with them, and they are less than
+their good qualities. We should often avoid to show
+what they have said, and what they have left unsaid.
+We should try to make them perceive their faults, so
+as to give them the merit of correcting them.
+
+There is a kind of politeness which is necessary in
+the intercourse among gentlemen, it makes them
+comprehend badinage, and it keeps them from using
+and employing certain figures of speech, too rude and
+unrefined, which are often used thoughtlessly when
+we hold to our opinion with too much warmth.
+
+The intercourse of gentlemen cannot subsist without
+a certain kind of confidence; this should be equal on
+both sides. Each should have an appearance of
+sincerity and of discretion which never causes the
+fear of anything imprudent being said.
+
+There should be some variety in wit. Those who
+have only one kind of wit cannot please for long
+unless they can take different roads, and not both use
+the same talents, thus adding to the pleasure of
+society, and keeping the same harmony that different
+voices and different instruments should observe in
+music; and as it is detrimental to the quiet of society,
+that many persons should have the same interests,
+it is yet as necessary for it that their interests should
+not be different.
+
+We should anticipate what can please our friends,
+find out how to be useful to them so as to exempt them
+from annoyance, and when we cannot avert evils,
+seem to participate in them, insensibly obliterate
+without attempting to destroy them at a blow, and
+place agreeable objects in their place, or at least such
+as will interest them. We should talk of subjects
+that concern them, but only so far as they like, and
+we should take great care where we draw the line.
+There is a species of politeness, and we may say a
+similar species of humanity, which does not enter too
+quickly into the recesses of the heart. It often takes
+pains to allow us to see all that our friends know,
+while they have still the advantage of not knowing
+to the full when we have penetrated the depth of the
+heart.
+
+Thus the intercourse between gentlemen at once
+gives them familiarity and furnishes them with an
+infinite number of subjects on which to talk freely.
+
+Few persons have sufficient tact and good sense
+fairly to appreciate many matters that are essential
+to maintain society. We desire to turn away at a
+certain point, but we do not want to be mixed up
+in everything, and we fear to know all kinds of
+truth.
+
+As we should stand at a certain distance to view
+objects, so we should also stand at a distance to observe
+society; each has its proper point of view from which
+it should be regarded. It is quite right that it
+should not be looked at too closely, for there is hardly
+a man who in all matters allows himself to be seen as
+he really is.
+
+
+V. On Conversation.
+
+
+The reason why so few persons are agreeable in con-
+versation is that each thinks more of what he desires
+to say, than of what the others say, and that we
+make bad listeners when we want to speak.
+
+Yet it is necessary to listen to those who talk, we
+should give them the time they want, and let them say
+even senseless things; never contradict or interrupt
+them; on the contrary, we should enter into their mind
+and taste, illustrate their meaning, praise anything
+they say that deserves praise, and let them see we
+praise more from our choice than from agreement
+with them.
+
+To please others we should talk on subjects they
+like and that interest them, avoid disputes upon in-
+different matters, seldom ask questions, and never let
+them see that we pretend to be better informed than
+they are.
+
+We should talk in a more or less serious manner,
+and upon more or less abstruse subjects, according to
+the temper and understanding of the persons we talk
+with, and readily give them the advantage of deciding
+without obliging them to answer when they are not
+anxious to talk.
+
+After having in this way fulfilled the duties of
+politeness, we can speak our opinions to our listeners
+when we find an opportunity without a sign of pre-
+sumption or opinionatedness. Above all things we
+should avoid often talking of ourselves and giving
+ourselves as an example; nothing is more tiresome
+than a man who quotes himself for everything.
+
+We cannot give too great study to find out the
+manner and the capacity of those with whom we talk,
+so as to join in the conversation of those who have
+more than ourselves without hurting by this prefer-
+ence the wishes or interests of others.
+
+Then we should modestly use all the modes above-
+mentioned to show our thoughts to them, and make
+them, if possible, believe that we take our ideas from
+them.
+
+We should never say anything with an air of
+authority, nor show any superiority of mind. We
+should avoid far-fetched expressions, expressions hard
+or forced, and never let the words be grander than
+the matter.
+
+It is not wrong to retain our opinions if they are
+reasonable, but we should yield to reason, wherever
+she appears and from whatever side she comes, she
+alone should govern our opinions, we should follow
+her without opposing the opinions of others, and
+without seeming to ignore what they say.
+
+It is dangerous to seek to be always the leader of the
+conversation, and to push a good argument too hard,
+when we have found one. Civility often hides half its
+understanding, and when it meets with an opinionated
+man who defends the bad side, spares him the disgrace
+of giving way.
+
+We are sure to displease when we speak too long
+and too often of one subject, and when we try to turn
+the conversation upon subjects that we think more
+instructive than others, we should enter indifferently
+upon every subject that is agreeable to others, stop-
+ping where they wish, and avoiding all they do not
+agree with.
+
+Every kind of conversation, however witty it may
+be, is not equally fitted for all clever persons; we
+should select what is to their taste and suitable to
+their condition, their sex, their talents, and also choose
+the time to say it.
+
+We should observe the place, the occasion, the
+temper in which we find the person who listens to us,
+for if there is much art in speaking to the purpose,
+there is no less in knowing when to be silent. There
+is an eloquent silence which serves to approve or to
+condemn, there is a silence of discretion and of respect.
+In a word, there is a tone, an air, a manner, which
+renders everything in conversation agreeable or dis-
+agreeable, refined or vulgar.
+
+But it is given to few persons to keep this secret
+well. Those who lay down rules too often break
+them, and the safest we are able to give is to listen
+much, to speak little, and to say nothing that will ever
+give ground for regret.
+
+
+VI. Falsehood.
+
+
+We are false in different ways. There are some
+men who are false from wishing always to appear what
+they are not. There are some who have better faith,
+who are born false, who deceive themselves, and who
+never see themselves as they really are; to some is
+given a true understanding and a false taste, others
+have a false understanding and some correctness in
+taste; there are some who have not any falsity
+either in taste or mind. These last are very rare, for
+to speak generally, there is no one who has not some
+falseness in some corner of his mind or his taste.
+
+What makes this falseness so universal, is that as
+our qualities are uncertain and confused, so too, are
+our tastes; we do not see things exactly as they are,
+we value them more or less than they are worth, and
+do not bring them into unison with ourselves in a
+manner which suits them or suits our condition or
+qualities.
+
+This mistake gives rise to an infinite number of
+falsities in the taste and in the mind. Our self-love
+is flattered by all that presents itself to us under the
+guise of good.
+
+But as there are many kinds of good which affect
+our vanity and our temper, so they are often followed
+from custom or advantage. We follow because the
+others follow, without considering that the same feeling
+ought not to be equally embarrassing to all kinds of
+persons, and that it should attach itself more or less
+firmly, according as persons agree more or less with
+those who follow them.
+
+We dread still more to show falseness in taste than
+in mind. Gentleness should approve without preju-
+dice what deserves to be approved, follow what
+deserves to be followed, and take offence at nothing.
+But there should be great distinction and great
+accuracy. We should distinguish between what is
+good in the abstract and what is good for ourselves,
+and always follow in reason the natural inclination
+which carries us towards matters that please us.
+
+If men only wished to excel by the help of their
+own talents, and in following their duty, there would
+be nothing false in their taste or in their conduct.
+They would show what they were, they would judge
+matters by their lights, and they would attract by their
+reason. There would be a discernment in their views,
+in their sentiments, their taste would be true, it would
+come to them direct, and not from others, they would
+follow from choice and not from habit or chance. If
+we are false in admiring what should not be admired,
+it is oftener from envy that we affix a value to
+qualities which are good in themselves, but which do
+not become us. A magistrate is false when he flatters
+himself he is brave, and that he will be able to be bold
+in certain cases. He should be as firm and stedfast
+in a plot which ought to be stifled without fear of
+being false, as he would be false and absurd in fighting
+a duel about it.
+
+A woman may like science, but all sciences are not
+suitable for her, and the doctrines of certain sciences
+never become her, and when applied by her are always
+false.
+
+We should allow reason and good sense to fix the
+value of things, they should determine our taste
+and give things the merit they deserve, and the im-
+portance it is fitting we should give them. But
+nearly all men are deceived in the price and in the
+value, and in these mistakes there is always a kind of
+falseness.
+
+
+VII. On Air and Manner.
+
+
+There is an air which belongs to the figure and
+talents of each individual; we always lose it when
+we abandon it to assume another.
+
+We should try to find out what air is natural to us
+and never abandon it, but make it as perfect as we can.
+This is the reason that the majority of children please.
+It is because they are wrapt up in the air and manner
+nature has given them, and are ignorant of any other.
+They are changed and corrupted when they quit
+infancy, they think they should imitate what they
+see, and they are not altogether able to imitate it. In
+this imitation there is always something of falsity and
+uncertainty. They have nothing settled in their man-
+ner and opinions. Instead of being in reality what
+they want to appear, they seek to appear what they
+are not.
+
+All men want to be different, and to be greater than
+they are; they seek for an air other than their own,
+and a mind different from what they possess; they
+take their style and manner at chance. They make
+experiments upon themselves without considering
+that what suits one person will not suit everyone,
+that there is no universal rule for taste or manners,
+and that there are no good copies.
+
+Few men, nevertheless, can have unison in many
+matters without being a copy of each other, if each
+follow his natural turn of mind. But in general a
+person will not wholly follow it. He loves to imitate.
+We often imitate the same person without perceiving
+it, and we neglect our own good qualities for the good
+qualities of others, which generally do not suit us.
+
+I do not pretend, from what I say, that each should
+so wrap himself up in himself as not to be able
+to follow example, or to add to his own, useful and
+serviceable habits, which nature has not given him.
+Arts and sciences may be proper for the greater part
+of those who are capable for them. Good manners and
+politeness are proper for all the world. But, yet
+acquired qualities should always have a certain agree-
+ment and a certain union with our own natural
+qualities, which they imperceptibly extend and in-
+crease. We are elevated to a rank and dignity above
+ourselves. We are often engaged in a new profession
+for which nature has not adapted us. All these con-
+ditions have each an air which belong to them, but
+which does not always agree with our natural manner.
+This change of our fortune often changes our air and
+our manners, and augments the air of dignity, which
+is always false when it is too marked, and when it is
+not united and amalgamated with that which nature
+has given us. We should unite and blend them to-
+gether, and thus render them such that they can
+never be separated.
+
+We should not speak of all subjects in one
+tone and in the same manner. We do not march
+at the head of a regiment as we walk on a pro-
+menade; and we should use the same style in which
+we should naturally speak of different things in the
+same way, with the same difference as we should walk,
+but always naturally, and as is suitable, either at
+the head of a regiment or on a promenade. There
+are some who are not content to abandon the air and
+manner natural to them to assume those of the rank
+and dignities to which they have arrived. There are
+some who assume prematurely the air of the dignities
+and rank to which they aspire. How many lieutenant-
+generals assume to be marshals of France, how many
+barristers vainly repeat the style of the Chancellor
+and how many female citizens give themselves the
+airs of duchesses.
+
+But what we are most often vexed at is that no one
+knows how to conform his air and manners with his
+appearance, nor his style and words with his thoughts
+and sentiments, that every one forgets himself and how
+far he is insensibly removed from the truth. Nearly
+every one falls into this fault in some way. No one
+has an ear sufficiently fine to mark perfectly this kind
+of cadence.
+
+Thousands of people with good qualities are dis-
+pleasing; thousands pleasing with far less abilities,
+and why? Because the first wish to appear to be what
+they are not, the second are what they appear.
+
+Some of the advantages or disadvantages that we
+have received from nature please in proportion as
+we know the air, the style, the manner, the senti-
+ments that coincide with our condition and our
+appearance, and displease in the proportion they are
+removed from that point.
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+THE LETTER R PRECEDING A REFERENCE REFERS TO THE REFLECTIONS,
+THE ROMAN NUMERALS REFER TO THE SUPPLEMENTS.
+
+
+Ability, 162, 165, 199, 245, 283, 288. SEE Cleverness
+-------, Sovereign, 244.
+Absence, 276.
+Accent, country, 342, XCIV.
+Accidents, 59, 310.
+Acquaintances, 426. SEE FRIENDS.
+Acknowledgements, 225.
+Actions, 1, 7, 57, 58, 160, 161, 382, 409, CXX.
+Actors, 256.
+Admiration, 178, 294, 474.
+Adroitness of mind, R.2.
+Adversity, 25.
+--------- of Friends, XV.
+Advice, 110, 116, 283, 378, CXVII.
+Affairs, 453, R 2.
+Affectation, 134, 493.
+Affections, 232.
+Afflictions, 233, 355, 362, 493, XCVII, XV.
+Age, 222, 405, LXXIII. SEE Old Age.
+Agreeableness, 255, R.5.
+Agreement, 240.
+Air, 399, 495, R.7.
+--- Of a Citizen, 393.
+Ambition, 24, 91, 246, 293, 490.
+Anger, XXX.
+Application, 41, 243.
+Appearances, 64, 166, 199, 256, 302, 431, 457, R.7.
+-----------, Conformity of Manners with, R.7.
+Applause, 272.
+Approbation, 51, 280.
+Artifices, 117, 124, 125, 126, R.2.
+Astonishment, 384.
+Avarice, 167, 491, 492.
+
+Ballads, 211.
+Beauty, 240, 474, 497, LI.
+------ of the Mind, R.2.
+Bel esprit defined, R.2.
+Benefits, 14, 298, 299, 301, CXXII.
+Benefactors, 96, 317, CXXII.
+Blame, CVIII.
+Blindness, XIX.
+Boasting, 141, 307.
+Boredom, 141, 304, 352. SEE Ennui.
+Bouts rimes, 382, CXX.
+Bravery, 1, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 219, 220, 221, 365,
+ 504. SEE Courage and Valour.
+Brilliancy of Mind, R.2.
+Brilliant things, LII.
+
+Capacity, 375.
+Caprice, 45.
+Chance, 57, 344, XCV. SEE Fortune.
+Character, LVI, R.2.
+Chastity, 1. SEE Virtue of Women.
+Cheating, 114, 127.
+Circumstances, 59, 470.
+Civility, 260.
+Clemency, 15, 16.
+Cleverness, 162, 269, 245, 399.
+Coarseness, 372.
+Comedy, 211, R.3.
+Compassion, 463. SEE Pity.
+Complaisance, 481, R.4.
+Conduct, 163, 227, 378, CXVII.
+Confidants, whom we make, R.1.
+Confidence, 239, 365, 475, XLIX, R.1, R.4.
+Confidence, difference from Sincerity
+----------, defined, R.1.
+Consolation, 325.
+Constancy, 19, 20, 21, 175, 176, 420.
+Contempt, 322.
+-------- of Death, 504.
+Contentment, LXXX.
+Contradictions, 478.
+Conversation, 139, 140, 142, 312, 313, 314, 364, 391,
+ 421, CIV, R.5.
+Copies, 133.
+Coquetry, 241. SEE Flirtation.
+Country Manner, 393.
+------- Accent, 342.
+Courage, 1, 214, 215, 216, 219, 221, XLII. SEE Bravery.
+Covetousness, opposed to Reason, 469
+Cowardice, 215, 480.
+Cowards, 370.
+Crimes, 183, 465, XXXV, XXXVII.
+Cunning, 126, 129, 394, 407.
+Curiosity, 173.
+
+Danger, XLII.
+Death, 21, 23, 26.
+-----, Contempt of, 504.
+Deceit, 86, 117, 118, 124, 127, 129, 395, 434. SEE ALSO
+ Self-Deceit.
+Deception, CXXI.
+Decency, 447.
+Defects, 31, 90, 493, LXXII. SEE Faults.
+Delicacy, 128, R.2.
+Dependency, result of Confidence, R.1.
+Designs, 160, 161.
+Desires, 439, 469, LXXXII, LXXXV.
+Despicable Persons, 322.
+Detail, Mind given to, R.2.
+Details, 41, 106.
+Devotion, 427.
+Devotees, 427.
+Devout, LXXVI.
+Differences, 135.
+Dignities, R.7.
+Discretion, R.5.
+Disguise, 119, 246, 282.
+Disgrace, 235, 412.
+Dishonour, 326, LXIX.
+Distrust, 84, 86, 335.
+Divination, 425.
+Doubt, 348.
+Docility, R.4.
+Dupes, 87, 102.
+
+Education, 261.
+Elevation, 399, 400, 403.
+Eloquence, 8, 249, 250.
+Employments, 164, 419, 449.
+Enemies, 114, 397, 458, 463.
+Ennui, 122, 141, 304, 312, 352, CXII, R.2.
+Envy, 27, 28, 280, 281, 328, 376, 433, 476, 486.
+Epithets assigned to the Mind, R.2.
+Esteem, 296.
+Establish, 56, 280.
+Evils, 121, 197, 269, 454, 464, XCIII.
+Example, 230.
+Exchange of secrets, R.1.
+Experience, 405.
+Expedients, 287.
+Expression, refined, R.5.
+
+Faculties of the Mind, 174.
+Failings, 397, 403.
+Falseness, R.6.
+---------, disguised, 282.
+---------, kinds of, R.6.
+Familiarity, R,4.
+Fame, 157.
+Farces, men compared to, 211.
+Faults, 37, 112, 155, 184, 190, 194, 196, 251, 354, 365,
+ 372, 397, 403, 411, 428, 493, 494, V, LXV, CX,
+ CXV.
+Favourites, 55.
+Fear, 370, LXVIII.
+Feeling, 255.
+Ferocity, XXXIII.
+Fickleness, 179, 181, 498.
+Fidelity, 247.
+--------, hardest test of, R.1.
+-------- in love, 331, 381, C.
+Figure and air, R.7.
+Firmness, 19, 479.
+Flattery, 123, 144, 152, 198, 320, 329.
+Flirts, 406, 418.
+Flirtation, 107, 241, 277, 332, 334, 349, 376, LXIV.
+Follies, 156, 300, 408, 416.
+Folly, 207, 208, 209, 210, 231, 300, 310, 311, 318,
+ XXIV.
+Fools, 140, 210, 309, 318, 357, 414, 451, 456,
+-----, old, 444.
+-----, witty, 451, 456.
+Force of Mind, 30, 42,
+, 237.
+Forgetfulness, XXVI.
+Forgiveness, 330.
+Fortitude, 19. SEE Bravery.
+Fortune, 1, 17, 45, 52, 53, 58, 60, 61, 154, 212, 227, 323,
+ 343, 380, 391, 392, 399, 403, 435, 449, IX., CXIX.
+Friends, 84, 114, 179, 235, 279, 315, 319, 428.
+-------, adversity of, XV.
+-------, disgrace of, 235.
+-------, faults of, 428.
+-------, true ones, LXXXVI.
+Friendship, 80, 81, 83, 376, 410, 427, 440, 441, 473,
+ XXII, CXXIV.
+----------, defined, 83.
+----------, women do not care for, 440.
+----------, rarer than love, 473.
+Funerals, XXXVIII.
+
+Gallantry, 100. SEE Flirtation.
+--------- of mind, 100.
+Generosity, 246.
+Genius, R.2.
+Gentleness, R.6.
+Ghosts, 76.
+Gifts of the mind, R.2.
+Glory, 157, 198, 221, 268.
+Good, 121, 185, 229, 238, 303, XCIII.
+----, how to be, XLVII.
+Goodness, 237, 275, 284, XLVI.
+Good grace, 67, R.7.
+Good man, who is a, 206.
+God nature, 481.
+Good qualities, 29, 90, 337, 365, 397, 462.
+Good sense, 67, 347, CVI.
+Good taste, 258.
+----------, rarity of, R.3.
+----, women, 368, XCVI.
+Government of others, 151.
+Grace, 67.
+Gracefulness, 240.
+Gratitude, 223, 224, 225, 279, 298, 438, XLIII.
+Gravity, 257.
+Great men, what they cannot acquire, LXXXIV.
+Great minds, 142.
+Great names, 94.
+Greediness, 66.
+
+Habit, 426.
+Happy, who are, 49.
+Happiness, 48, 61, VII, LXXX, LXXXI.
+hatred, 338.
+Head, 102, 108.
+Health, 188, LVII.
+Heart, 98, 102, 103, 108, 478, 484.
+Heroes, 24, 53, 185.
+Honesty, 202, 206.
+Honour, 270.
+Hope, 168, LXVIII.
+Humility, 254, 358, LXXVI, LXXIX
+Humiliation, 272.
+Humour, 47. SEE Temper.
+Hypocrisy, 218.
+--------- of afflictions, 233.
+
+Idleness, 169, 266, 267, 398, 482, 487, XVIII., LV.
+Ills, 174. SEE Evils.
+Illusions, 123.
+Imagination, 478.
+Imitation, 230, XLIV, R.5.
+Impertinence, 502.
+Impossibilities, 30.
+Incapacity, 126.
+Inclination, 253, 390.
+Inconsistency, 135.
+Inconstancy, 181.
+Inconvenience, 242.
+Indifference, 172, XXIII.
+Indiscretion, 429.
+Indolence. SEE Idleness, and Laziness.
+Infidelity, 359, 360, 381, 429.
+Ingratitude, 96, 226, 306, 317.
+Injuries, 14.
+Injustice, 78.
+Innocence, 465.
+Instinct, 123.
+Integrity, 170.
+Interest, 39, 40, 66, 85, 172, 187, 232, 253, 305, 390.
+Interests, 66.
+Intrepidity, 217, XL.
+Intrigue, 73.
+Invention, 287.
+
+Jealousy, 28, 32, 324, 336, 359, 361, 446, 503, CII.
+Joy, XIV.
+Judges, 268.
+Judgment, 89, 97, 248.
+-------- of the World, 212, 455.
+Justice, 78, 458, XII.
+
+Kindness, 14, 85.
+Knowledge, 106.
+
+Labour of Body, effect of, LXXVII.
+Laments, 355.
+Laziness, 367. SEE Idleness.
+Leader, 43.
+Levity, 179, 181.
+Liberality, 167, 263.
+Liberty in Society, R.4.
+Limits to Confidence, R.1.
+Little Minds, 142.
+Love, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 136, 259, 262,
+ 274, 286, 296, 321, 335, 336, 348, 349, 351, 353,
+ 361, 371, 374, 385, 395, 396, 402, 417, 418, 422,
+ 430, 440, 441, 459, 466, 471, 473, 499, 500, 501,
+ x, XI, XIII, LVIII, LX, LXII, LXXXVIII,
+ XCIX, CIII, CXXI.
+---- defined, 68.
+----, Coldness in, LX.
+----, Effect of absence on, 276.
+---- akin to Hate, 111.
+---- of Women, 466, 471, 499.
+----, Novelty in, 274.
+----, Infidelity in, LXIV.
+----, Old age of, 430.
+----, Cure for, 417, 459.
+Loss of Friends, XLV.
+Lovers, 312, 362, LXXXVII, XCVII.
+Lunatic, 353.
+Luxury, LIV.
+Lying, 63.
+
+Madmen, 353, 414.
+Malady, LVII.
+Magistrates, R.6.
+Magnanimity, 248, LIII.
+----------- defined, 285.
+Malice, 483.
+Manners, R.7.
+Mankind, 436, XXXVI.
+Marriages, 113.
+Maxims, LXVII.
+Mediocrity, 375.
+Memory, 89, 313.
+Men easier to know than Man, 436.
+Merit, 50, 92, 95, 153, 156, 165, 166, 273, 291, 379,
+ 401, 437, 455, CXVIII.
+Mind, 101, 103, 265, 357, 448, 482, CIX.
+Mind, Capacities of, R.2.
+Miserable, 49.
+Misfortunes, 19, 24, 174, 325.
+----------- of Friends. XV.
+----------- of Enemies, 463.
+Mistaken people, 386.
+Mistrust, 86.
+Mockery, R.2.
+Moderation, 17, 18, 293, 308, III, IV.
+Money, Man compared to, XXXII.
+Motives, 409.
+
+Names, Great, 94.
+Natural goodness, 275.
+Natural, to be, 431.
+-------, always pleasing, R.7.
+Nature, 53, 153, 189, 365, 404.
+Negotiations, 278.
+Novelty in study, 178.
+------- in love, 274.
+------- in friendship, 426.
+
+Obligations, 299, 317, 438. SEE Benefits and Gratitude.
+Obstinacy, 234, 424.
+--------- its cause, 265.
+Occasions. SEE Opportunities.
+Old Age, 109, 210, 418, 423, 430, 461.
+Old Men, 93.
+Openness of heart, R.1.
+Opinions, 13, 234, CXXIII, R.5.
+Opinionatedness, R.5.
+Opportunities, 345, 453, CV.
+
+Passions, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 122, 188, 266, 276, 404,
+ 422, 443, 460, 471, 477, 484, 485, 486, 500, II.
+Peace of Mind, VIII.
+Penetration, 377, 425, CXVI.
+Perfection, R.2.
+Perseverance, 177.
+Perspective, 104.
+Persuasion, 8.
+Philosophers, 46, 54, 504, XXI.
+Philosophy, 22.
+---------- of a Footman, 504, LXXV.
+Pity, 264.
+Pleasing, 413, CXXV.
+--------, Mode of, XLVIII, R.5.
+--------, Mind a, R.2.
+Point of view, R.4.
+Politeness, 372, R.5.
+Politeness of Mind, 99.
+Praise, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 272, 356,
+ 432, XXVII, CVII.
+Preoccupation, 92, R.3.
+Pride, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 228, 234, 239, 254, 267, 281,
+ 450, 462, 463, 472, VI, XIX.
+Princes, 15, 320.
+Proceedings, 170.
+Productions of the Mind, R.2.
+Professions, 256.
+Promises, 38.
+Proportion, R.6.
+Propriety, 447.
+--------- in Women, XXXIV.
+Prosperity, 25.
+Providence, XXXIX.
+Prudence, 65, LXXXVIII, R.1.
+
+Qualities, 29, 162, 397, 470, 498, R.6, R.7.
+---------, Bad, 468.
+---------, Good, 88, 337, 462.
+---------, Great, 159, 433.
+---------, of Mind, classified, R.20.
+Quarrels, 496,
+Quoting oneself, R.5.
+
+Raillery, R.2, R.4.
+Rank, 401.
+Reason, 42, 105, 325, 365, 467, 469, XX, R.6.
+Recollection in Memory{, 313}.
+Reconciliation, 82.
+Refinement, R.2.
+Regret, 355.
+Relapses, 193.
+Remedies, 288.
+-------- for love 459.
+Remonstrances, 37.
+Repentance, 180.
+Repose, 268.
+Reproaches, 148.
+Reputation, 268, 412.
+Resolution, L.
+Revenge, 14.
+Riches, 54.
+Ridicule, 133, 134, 326, 418, 422.
+Rules for Conversation, R.5.
+Rusticity, 393.
+
+Satire, 483, R.2, R.4.
+Sciences, R.6.
+Secrets, XVI, R.1.
+-------, How they should be kept, R.1.
+Self-deceit, 115, 452.
+Self-love, 2, 3, 4, 228, 236, 247, 261, 262, 339, 494, 500,
+ I, XVII, XXVIII, XXXIII, LXVI, LXXIV.
+--------- in love, 262.
+Self-satisfaction, 51.
+Sensibility, 275.
+Sensible People, 347, CVI.
+Sentiment, 255, R.6.
+Severity of Women, 204, 333.
+Shame, 213, 220.
+Silence, 79, 137, 138, CXIV.
+Silliness. SEE Folly.
+Simplicity, 289.
+Sincerity, 62, 316, 366, 383, 457.
+---------, Difference between it and Confidence, R.1.
+---------, defined, R.1.
+--------- of Lovers, LXI.
+Skill, LXIV.
+Sobriety, XXV.
+Society, 87, 201, R.4.
+-------, Distinction between it and Friendship, R.IV.
+Soul, 80, 188, 194.
+Souls, Great, XXXI.
+Sorrows, LXXVIII.
+Stages of Life, 405.
+Strength of mind, 19, 20, 21, 504.
+Studies, why new ones are pleasing, 178.
+-------, what to study, XCII.
+Subtilty, 128.
+Sun, 26.
+
+Talents, 468.
+-------, latent, 344, XCV.
+Talkativeness, 314.
+Taste, 13, 109, 252, 390, 467, CXX, R.3, R.6.
+-----, good, 258, R.3.
+-----, cause of diversities in, R.3.
+-----, false, R.3.
+Tears, 233, 373.
+Temper, 47, 290, 292.
+Temperament, 220, 222, 297, 346.
+Times for speaking, R.5.
+Timidity, 169, 480.
+Titles, XXXII.
+Tranquillity, 488.
+Treachery, 120, 126.
+Treason, 120.
+Trickery, 86, 350, XCI. SEE Deceit.
+Trifles, 41.
+Truth, 64, LI.
+Tyranny, R.1.
+
+Understanding, 89.
+Untruth, 63. SEE Lying.
+Unhappy, CXXV.
+
+Valour, 1, 213, 214, 215, 216. SEE Bravery and Courage.
+Vanity, 137, 158, 200, 232, 388, 389, 443, 467, 483.
+Variety of mind, R.4.
+Vice, 182, 186, 187, 189, 191, 192, 195, 218, 253, 273,
+ 380, 442, 445, XXIX.
+Violence, 363, 369, 466, CXIII.
+Victory, XII.
+Virtue, 1, 25, 169, 171, 182, 186, 187, 189, 200, 218,
+ 253, 380, 388, 442, 445, 489, XXIX.
+Virtue of Women, 1, 220, 367, XCVIII.
+Vivacity, 416.
+
+Weakness, 130, 445.
+Wealth, Contempt of, 301.
+Weariness. SEE Ennui.
+Wicked people, 284.
+Wife jealous sometimes desirable, LXXXIX.
+Will, 30.
+Wisdom, 132, 210, 231, 323, {4}44, LXXXIII.
+Wise Man, who is a, 203, XCI.
+Wishes, 295.
+Wit, 199, 340, 413, 415, 421, 502.
+Wives, 364, CIV.
+Woman, 131, 204, 205, 220, 241, 277, 332, 333, 334,
+ 340, 346, 362, 367, 368, 418, 429, 440, 466, 471,
+ 474, LXX, XC.
+Women, Severity of, 333.
+-----, Virtue of, 205, 220, XC.
+-----, Power of, LXXI.
+Wonder, 384.
+World, 201.
+-----, Judgment of, 268.
+-----, Approbation of, 201.
+-----, Establishment in, 56.
+-----, Praise and censure of, 454.
+
+Young men, 378, 495.
+Youth, 271, 341.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences
+and Moral Maxims, by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+
+Author: Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+Release Date: October, 2005 [EBook #9105]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on September 8, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORAL MAXIMS ***
+
+
+
+
+
+{Transcriber's notes: spelling variants are preserved (e.g. labour
+instead of labor, criticise instead of criticize, etc.); words that
+were italicized appear in all CAPITALS; the translators' comments are
+in square brackets [...] as they are in the text; footnotes are indicated
+by * and appear in angled brackets <...> immediately following the passage
+containing the note (in the text they appear at the bottom of the page);
+and, finally, I give corrections and addenda in curly brackets {...}.}
+
+
+
+Rochefoucauld
+
+
+“As Rochefoucauld his maxims drew
+From Nature--I believe them true.
+They argue no corrupted mind
+In him; the fault is in mankind.”--Swift.
+
+“Les Maximes de la Rochefoucauld sont des proverbs des
+gens d'esprit.”--Montesquieu.
+
+“Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations.”--Sir J.
+Mackintosh.
+
+“Translators should not work alone; for good ET PROPRIA VERBA
+do not always occur to one mind.”--Luther's TABLE TALK, iii.
+
+
+
+Reflections; or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+
+By
+
+Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld,
+Prince de Marsillac.
+
+Translated from the Editions of 1678 and 1827 with introduction,
+notes, and some account of the author and his times.
+
+By
+
+J. W. Willis Bund, M.A. LL.B
+and
+J. Hain Friswell
+
+Simpson Low, Son, and Marston,
+188, Fleet Street.
+1871.
+
+
+
+{Translators'} Preface.
+
+
+Some apology must be made for an attempt
+“to translate the untranslatable.” Not-
+withstanding there are no less than eight
+English translations of La Rochefoucauld, hardly
+any are readable, none are free from faults, and all
+fail more or less to convey the author's meaning.
+Though so often translated, there is not a complete
+English edition of the Maxims and Reflections. All
+the translations are confined exclusively to the
+Maxims, none include the Reflections. This may be
+accounted for, from the fact that most of the trans-
+lations are taken from the old editions of the
+Maxims, in which the Reflections do not appear.
+Until M. Suard devoted his attention to the text
+of Rochefoucauld, the various editions were but
+reprints of the preceding ones, without any regard
+to the alterations made by the author in the later
+editions published during his life-time. So much
+was this the case, that Maxims which had been
+rejected by Rochefoucauld in his last edition, were
+still retained in the body of the work. To give
+but one example, the celebrated Maxim as to the
+misfortunes of our friends, was omitted in the last
+edition of the book, published in Rochefoucauld's
+life-time, yet in every English edition this Maxim
+appears in the body of the work.
+
+M. Aimé Martin in 1827 published an edition
+of the Maxims and Reflections which has ever since
+been the standard text of Rochefoucauld in France.
+The Maxims are printed from the edition of 1678,
+the last published during the author's life, and the
+last which received his corrections. To this edition
+were added two Supplements; the first containing
+the Maxims which had appeared in the editions of
+1665, 1666, and 1675, and which were afterwards
+omitted; the second, some additional Maxims
+found among various of the author's manuscripts
+in the Royal Library at Paris. And a Series of Re-
+flections which had been previously published in a
+work called “Receuil de pièces d'histoire et de litté-
+rature.” Paris, 1731. They were first published
+with the Maxims in an edition by Gabriel Brotier.
+
+In an edition of Rochefoucauld entitled “Reflex-
+ions, ou Sentences et Maximes Morales, augmentées
+de plus deux cent nouvelles Maximes et Maximes
+et Pensées diverses suivant les copies Imprimées à
+Paris, chez Claude Barbin, et Matre Cramoisy
+1692,”* some fifty Maxims were added, ascribed
+by the editor to Rochefoucauld, and as his family
+allowed them to be published under his name, it
+seems probable they were genuine. These fifty
+form the third supplement to this book.
+
+*<In all the French editions this book is spoken of as
+published in 1693. The only copy I have seen is in the
+Cambridge University Library, 47, 16, 81, and is called
+“Reflexions Morales.”>
+
+The apology for the present edition of Rochefou-
+cauld must therefore be twofold: firstly, that it is
+an attempt to give the public a complete English
+edition of Rochefoucauld's works as a moralist.
+The body of the work comprises the Maxims
+as the author finally left them, the first supple-
+ment, those published in former editions, and
+rejected by the author in the later; the second, the
+unpublished Maxims taken from the author's cor-
+respondence and manuscripts, and the third, the
+Maxims first published in 1692. While the Re-
+flections, in which the thoughts in the Maxims are
+extended and elaborated, now appear in English
+for the first time. And secondly, that it is an
+attempt (to quote the preface of the edition of
+1749) “to do the Duc de la Rochefoucauld the
+justice to make him speak English.”
+
+
+
+{Translators'} Introduction
+
+
+The description of the “ancien regime” in
+France, “a despotism tempered by epigrams,”
+like most epigrammatic sentences, contains
+some truth, with much fiction. The society of
+the last half of the seventeenth, and the whole of the
+eighteenth centuries, was doubtless greatly influenced
+by the precise and terse mode in which the popular
+writers of that date expressed their thoughts. To a
+people naturally inclined to think that every possible
+view, every conceivable argument, upon a question is
+included in a short aphorism, a shrug, and the word
+“voilà,” truths expressed in condensed sentences must
+always have a peculiar charm. It is, perhaps, from this
+love of epigram, that we find so many eminent
+French writers of maxims. Pascal, De Retz, La
+Rochefoucauld, La Bruyère, Montesquieu, and Vau-
+venargues, each contributed to the rich stock of French
+epigrams. No other country can show such a list
+of brilliant writers--in England certainly we can-
+not. Our most celebrated, Lord Bacon, has, by
+his other works, so surpassed his maxims, that their
+fame is, to a great measure, obscured. The only
+Englishman who could have rivalled La Rochefou-
+cauld or La Bruyère was the Earl of Chesterfield, and
+he only could have done so from his very inti-
+mate connexion with France; but unfortunately his
+brilliant genius was spent in the impossible task of
+trying to refine a boorish young Briton, in “cutting
+blocks with a razor.”
+
+Of all the French epigrammatic writers La Rochefou-
+cauld is at once the most widely known, and the most
+distinguished. Voltaire, whose opinion on the cen-
+tury of Louis XIV. is entitled to the greatest weight,
+says, “One of the works that most largely contributed
+to form the taste of the nation, and to diffuse a spirit
+of justice and precision, is the collection of maxims,
+by Francois Duc de la Rochefoucauld.”
+
+This Francois, the second Duc de la Rochefoucauld,
+Prince de Marsillac, the author of the maxims, was
+one of the most illustrious members of the most illus-
+trious families among the French noblesse. Descended
+from the ancient Dukes of Guienne, the founder of
+the Family Fulk or Foucauld, a younger branch of
+the House of Lusignan, was at the commencement of
+the eleventh century the Seigneur of a small town,
+La Roche, in the Angounois. Our chief knowledge of
+this feudal lord is drawn from the monkish chronicles.
+As the benefactor of the various abbeys and monas-
+teries in his province, he is naturally spoken of by
+them in terms of eulogy, and in the charter of one of
+the abbeys of Angouleme he is called, “vir nobilissimus
+Fulcaldus.” His territorial power enabled him to
+adopt what was then, as is still in Scotland, a com-
+mon custom, to prefix the name of his estate to his
+surname, and thus to create and transmit to his
+descendants the illustrious surname of La Rochefou-
+cauld.
+
+From that time until that great crisis in the history
+of the French aristocracy, the Revolution of 1789, the
+family of La Rochefoucauld have been, “if not first, in
+the very first line” of that most illustrious body. One
+Seigneur served under Philip Augustus against Richard
+Coeur de Lion, and was made prisoner at the battle
+of Gisors. The eighth Seigneur Guy performed a great
+tilt at Bordeaux, attended (according to Froissart) to
+the Lists by some two hundred of his kindred and
+relations. The sixteenth Seigneur Francais was cham-
+berlain to Charles VIII. and Louis XII., and stood
+at the font as sponsor, giving his name to that last
+light of French chivalry, Francis I. In 1515 he was
+created a baron, and was afterwards advanced to a
+count, on account of his great service to Francis and
+his predecessors.
+
+The second count pushed the family fortune still
+further by obtaining a patent as the Prince de Mar-
+sillac. His widow, Anne de Polignac, entertained
+Charles V. at the family chateau at Verteuil, in so
+princely a manner that on leaving Charles observed,
+“He had never entered a house so redolent of high
+virtue, uprightness, and lordliness as that mansion.”
+
+The third count, after serving with distinction
+under the Duke of Guise against the Spaniards, was
+made prisoner at St. Quintin, and only regained his
+liberty to fall a victim to the “bloody infamy” of St.
+Bartholomew. His son, the fourth count, saved with
+difficulty from that massacre, after serving with dis-
+tinction in the religious wars, was taken prisoner
+in a skirmish at St. Yriex la Perche, and murdered
+by the Leaguers in cold blood.
+
+The fifth count, one of the ministers of Louis
+XIII., after fighting against the English and Buck-
+ingham at the Ile de Ré, was created a duke. His
+son Francis, the second duke, by his writings has
+made the family name a household word.
+
+The third duke fought in many of the earlier cam-
+paigns of Louis XIV. at Torcy, Lille, Cambray, and
+was dangerously wounded at the passage of the Rhine.
+From his bravery he rose to high favour at Court, and
+was appointed Master of the Horse (Grand Veneur)
+and Lord Chamberlain. His son, the fourth duke,
+commanded the regiment of Navarre, and took part
+in storming the village of Neerwinden on the day
+when William III. was defeated at Landen. He was
+afterwards created Duc de la Rochequyon and Marquis
+de Liancourt.
+
+The fifth duke, banished from Court by Louis XV.,
+became the friend of the philosopher Voltaire.
+
+The sixth duke, the friend of Condorcet, was the
+last of the long line of noble lords who bore that
+distinguished name. In those terrible days of Sep-
+tember, 1792, when the French people were proclaim-
+ing universal humanity, the duke was seized as an
+aristocrat by the mob at Gisors and put to death
+behind his own carriage, in which sat his mother and
+his wife, at the very place where, some six centuries
+previously, his ancestor had been taken prisoner in
+a fair fight. A modern writer has spoken of this
+murder “as an admirable reprisal upon the grandson
+for the writings and conduct of the grandfather.”
+But M. Sainte Beuve observes as to this, he can see
+nothing admirable in the death of the duke, and if it
+proves anything, it is only that the grandfather was
+not so wrong in his judgment of men as is usually
+supposed.
+
+Francis, the author, was born on the 15th December
+1615. M. Sainte Beuve divides his life into four
+periods, first, from his birth till he was thirty-five, when
+he became mixed up in the war of the Fronde; the
+second period, during the progress of that war; the
+third, the twelve years that followed, while he re-
+covered from his wounds, and wrote his maxims dur-
+ing his retirement from society; and the last from
+that time till his death.
+
+In the same way that Herodotus calls each book of
+his history by the name of one of the muses, so each
+of these four periods of La Rochefoucauld's life may
+be associated with the name of a woman who was for
+the time his ruling passion. These four ladies are the
+Duchesse de Chevreuse, the Duchesse de Longueville,
+Madame de Sablé, and Madame de La Fayette.
+
+La Rochefoucauld's early education was neglected;
+his father, occupied in the affairs of state, either had
+not, or did not devote any time to his education. His
+natural talents and his habits of observation soon,
+however, supplied all deficiencies. By birth and sta-
+tion placed in the best society of the French Court,
+he soon became a most finished courtier. Knowing
+how precarious Court favour then was, his father,
+when young Rochefoucauld was only nine years old,
+sent him into the army. He was subsequently at-
+tached to the regiment of Auvergne. Though but
+sixteen he was present, and took part in the mili-
+tary operations at the siege of Cassel. The Court of
+Louis XIII. was then ruled imperiously by Richelieu.
+The Duke de la Rochefoucauld was strongly opposed
+to the Cardinal's party. By joining in the plots of
+Gaston of Orleans, he gave Richelieu an opportunity
+of ridding Paris of his opposition. When those plots
+were discovered, the Duke was sent into a sort of
+banishment to Blois. His son, who was then at
+Court with him, was, upon the pretext of a liaison
+with Mdlle. d'Hautefort, one of the ladies in waiting
+on the Queen (Anne of Austria), but in reality to pre-
+vent the Duke learning what was passing at Paris, sent
+with his father. The result of the exile was Roche-
+foucauld's marriage. With the exception that his
+wife's name was Mdlle. Vivonne, and that she was
+the mother of five sons and three daughters, nothing
+is known of her. While Rochefoucauld and his
+father were at Blois, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, one
+of the beauties of the Court, and the mistress of
+Louis, was banished to Tours. She and Rochefou-
+cauld met, and soon became intimate, and for a time
+she was destined to be the one motive of his actions.
+The Duchesse was engaged in a correspondence with
+the Court of Spain and the Queen. Into this plot
+Rochefoucauld threw himself with all his energy; his
+connexion with the Queen brought him back to his
+old love Mdlle. d'Hautefort, and led him to her
+party, which he afterwards followed. The course he
+took shut him off from all chance of Court favour.
+The King regarded him with coldness, the Cardinal
+with irritation. Although the Bastile and the scaffold,
+the fate of Chalais and Montmorency, were before his
+eyes, they failed to deter him from plotting. He was
+about twenty-three; returning to Paris, he warmly
+sided with the Queen. He says in his Memoirs
+that the only persons she could then trust were him-
+self and Mdlle. d'Hautefort, and it was proposed he
+should take both of them from Paris to Brussels. Into
+this plan he entered with all his youthful indiscretion,
+it being for several reasons the very one he would wish
+to adopt, as it would strengthen his influence with
+Anne of Austria, place Richelieu and his master in an
+uncomfortable position, and save Mdlle. d'Hautefort
+from the attentions the King was showing her.
+
+But Richelieu of course discovered this plot, and
+Rochefoucauld was, of course, sent to the Bastile.
+He was liberated after a week's imprisonment, but
+banished to his chateau at Verteuil.
+
+The reason for this clemency was that the Cardinal
+desired to win Rochefoucauld from the Queen's party.
+A command in the army was offered to him, but by
+the Queen's orders refused.
+
+For some three years Rochefoucauld remained at
+Verteuil, waiting the time for his reckoning with
+Richelieu; speculating on the King's death, and the
+favours he would then receive from the Queen. During
+this period he was more or less engaged in plotting
+against his enemy the Cardinal, and hatching treason
+with Cinq Mars and De Thou.
+
+M. Sainte Beuve says, that unless we study this first
+part of Rochefoucauld's life, we shall never under-
+stand his maxims. The bitter disappointment of the
+passionate love, the high hopes then formed, the deceit
+and treachery then witnessed, furnished the real key to
+their meaning. The cutting cynicism of the morality
+was built on the ruins of that chivalrous ambition and
+romantic affection. He saw his friend Cinq Mars
+sent to the scaffold, himself betrayed by men whom
+he had trusted, and the only reason he could assign
+for these actions was intense selfishness.
+
+Meanwhile, Richelieu died. Rochefoucauld re-
+turned to Court, and found Anne of Austria regent,
+and Mazarin minister. The Queen's former friends
+flocked there in numbers, expecting that now their
+time of prosperity had come. They were bitterly dis-
+appointed. Mazarin relied on hope instead of grati-
+tude, to keep the Queen's adherents on his side. The
+most that any received were promises that were never
+performed. In after years, doubtless, Rochefoucauld's
+recollection of his disappointment led him to write the
+maxim: “We promise according to our hopes, we per-
+form according to our fears.” But he was not even to
+receive promises; he asked for the Governorship of
+Havre, which was then vacant. He was flatly refused.
+Disappointment gave rise to anger, and uniting with
+his old flame, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, who had
+received the same treatment, and with the Duke of
+Beaufort, they formed a conspiracy against the govern-
+ment. The plot was, of course, discovered and crushed.
+Beaufort was arrested, the Duchesse banished. Irri-
+tated and disgusted, Rochefoucauld went with the
+Duc d'Enghein, who was then joining the army, on a
+campaign, and here he found the one love of his life,
+the Duke's sister, Mdme. de Longueville. This lady,
+young, beautiful, and accomplished, obtained a great
+ascendancy over Rochefoucauld, and was the cause of
+his taking the side of Condé in the subsequent civil
+war. Rochefoucauld did not stay long with the army.
+He was badly wounded at the siege of Mardik, and
+returned from thence to Paris. On recovering from
+his wounds, the war of the Fronde broke out. This
+war is said to have been most ridiculous, as being
+carried on without a definite object, a plan, or a
+leader. But this description is hardly correct; it was
+the struggle of the French nobility against the rule
+of the Court; an attempt, the final attempt, to re-
+cover their lost influence over the state, and to save
+themselves from sinking under the rule of cardinals
+and priests.
+
+With the general history of that war we have
+nothing to do; it is far too complicated and too
+confused to be stated here. The memoirs of Roche-
+foucauld and De Retz will give the details to those
+who desire to trace the contests of the factions--the
+course of the intrigues. We may confine ourselves to
+its progress so far as it relates to the Duc de la Roche-
+foucauld.
+
+On the Cardinal causing the Princes de Condé
+and Conti, and the Duc de Longueville, to be
+arrested, Rochefoucauld and the Duchess fled into
+Normandy. Leaving her at Dieppe, he went into
+Poitou, of which province he had some years pre-
+viously bought the post of governor. He was there
+joined by the Duc de Bouillon, and he and the Duke
+marched to, and occupied Bordeaux. Cardinal Ma-
+zarin and Marechal de la Meilleraie advanced in force
+on Bordeaux, and attacked the town. A bloody
+battle followed. Rochefoucauld defended the town
+with the greatest bravery, and repulsed the Cardinal.
+Notwithstanding the repulse, the burghers of Bor-
+deaux were anxious to make peace, and save the city
+from destruction. The Parliament of Bordeaux com-
+pelled Rochefoucauld to surrender. He did so, and
+returned nominally to Poitou, but in reality in secret
+to Paris.
+
+There he found the Queen engaged in trying to
+maintain her position by playing off the rival parties
+of the Prince Condé and the Cardinal De Retz against
+each other. Rochefoucauld eagerly espoused his old
+party--that of Condé. In August, 1651, the contend-
+ing parties met in the Hall of the Parliament of Paris,
+and it was with great difficulty they were prevented
+from coming to blows even there. It is even said that
+Rochefoucauld had ordered his followers to murder
+De Retz.
+
+Rochefoucauld was soon to undergo a bitter disap-
+pointment. While occupied with party strife and
+faction in Paris, Madame de Chevreuse left him,
+and formed an alliance with the Duc de Nemours.
+Rochefoucauld still loved her. It was, probably,
+thinking of this that he afterwards wrote, “Jealousy is
+born with love, but does not die with it.” He endea-
+voured to get Madame de Chatillon, the old mistress
+of the Duc de Nemours, reinstated in favour, but in
+this he did not succeed. The Duc de Nemours was
+soon after killed in a duel. The war went on, and
+after several indecisive skirmishes, the decisive battle
+was fought at Paris, in the Faubourg St. Antoine,
+where the Parisians first learnt the use or the abuse
+of their favourite defence, the barricade. In this
+battle, Rochefoucauld behaved with great bravery.
+He was wounded in the head, a wound which for a
+time deprived him of his sight. Before he recovered,
+the war was over, Louis XIV. had attained his ma-
+jority, the gold of Mazarin, the arms of Turenne, had
+been successful, the French nobility were vanquished,
+the court supremacy established.
+
+This completed Rochefoucauld's active life.
+
+When he recovered his health, he devoted himself
+to society. Madame de Sablé assumed a hold over
+him. He lived a quiet life, and occupied himself in
+composing an account of his early life, called his
+“Memoirs,” and his immortal “Maxims.”
+
+From the time he ceased to take part in public life,
+Rochefoucauld's real glory began. Having acted the
+various parts of soldier, politician, and lover with but
+small success, he now commenced the part of moralist,
+by which he is known to the world.
+
+Living in the most brilliant society that France
+possessed, famous from his writings, distinguished
+from the part he had taken in public affairs, he
+formed the centre of one of those remarkable French
+literary societies, a society which numbered among its
+members La Fontaine, Racine, Boileau. Among his
+most attached friends was Madame de La Fayette (the
+authoress of the “Princess of Cleeves”), and this friend-
+ship continued until his death. He was not, however,
+destined to pass away in that gay society without
+some troubles. At the passage of the Rhine in 1672
+two of his sons were engaged; the one was killed,
+the other severely wounded. Rochefoucauld was
+much affected by this, but perhaps still more by the
+death of the young Duc de Longueville, who perished
+on the same occasion.
+
+Sainte Beuve says that the cynical book and that
+young life were the only fruits of the war of the
+Fronde. Madame de Sévigné, who was with him
+when he heard the news of the death of so much that
+was dear to him, says, “I saw his heart laid bare on that
+cruel occasion, and his courage, his merit, his tender-
+ness, and good sense surpassed all I ever met with. I
+hold his wit and accomplishments as nothing in com-
+parison.” The combined effect of his wounds and the
+gout caused the last years of Rochefoucauld's life to
+be spent in great pain. Madame de Sévigné, who
+was {with} him continually during his last illness, speaks of
+the fortitude with which he bore his sufferings as
+something to be admired. Writing to her daughter,
+she says, “Believe me, it is not for nothing he has
+moralised all his life; he has thought so often on his
+last moments that they are nothing new or unfamiliar
+to him.”
+
+In his last illness, the great moralist was attended
+by the great divine, Bossuet. Whether that match-
+less eloquence or his own philosophic calm had,
+in spite of his writings, brought him into the state
+Madame de Sévigné describes, we know not; but
+one, or both, contributed to his passing away in a
+manner that did not disgrace a French noble or a
+French philosopher. On the 11th March, 1680, he
+ended his stormy life in peace after so much strife, a
+loyal subject after so much treason.
+
+One of his friends, Madame Deshoulières, shortly
+before he died sent him an ode on death, which
+aptly describes his state--
+ “Oui, soyez alors plus ferme,
+ Que ces vulgaires humains
+ Qui, près de leur dernier terme,
+ De vaines terreurs sont pleins.
+ En sage que rien n'offense,
+ Livrez-vous sans resistance
+ A d'inévitables traits;
+ Et, d'une demarche égale,
+ Passez cette onde fatal
+ Qu'on ne repasse jamais.”
+
+Rochefoucauld left behind him only two works, the
+one, Memoirs of his own time, the other the Maxims.
+The first described the scenes in which his youth had
+been spent, and though written in a lively style,
+and giving faithful pictures of the intrigues and the
+scandals of the court during Louis XIV.'s minority,
+yet, except to the historian, has ceased at the present
+day to be of much interest. It forms, perhaps, the
+true key to understand the special as opposed to
+general application of the maxims.
+
+Notwithstanding the assertion of Bayle, that “there
+are few people so bigoted to antiquity as not to prefer
+the Memoirs of La Rochefoucauld to the Commen-
+taries of Caesar,” or the statement of Voltaire, “that
+the Memoirs are universally read and the Maxims are
+learnt by heart,” few persons at the present day ever
+heard of the Memoirs, and the knowledge of most as
+to the Maxims is confined to that most celebrated of
+all, though omitted from his last edition, “There
+is something in the misfortunes of our best friends
+which does not wholly displease us.” Yet it is
+difficult to assign a cause for this; no book is
+perhaps oftener unwittingly quoted, none certainly
+oftener unblushingly pillaged; upon none have so
+many contradictory opinions been given.
+
+“Few books,” says Mr. Hallam, “have been more
+highly extolled, or more severely blamed, than the
+maxims of the Duke of Rochefoucauld, and that not
+only here, but also in France.” Rousseau speaks of it
+as, “a sad and melancholy book,” though he goes on
+to say “it is usually so in youth when we do not like
+seeing man as he is.” Voltaire says of it, in the words
+above quoted, “One of the works which most contri-
+buted to form the taste of the (French) nation, and
+to give it a spirit of justness and precision, was the
+collection of the maxims of Francois Duc de la Roche-
+foucauld, though there is scarcely more than one
+truth running through the book--that ‘self-love is the
+motive of everything’--yet this thought is presented
+under so many varied aspects that it is nearly always
+striking. It is not so much a book as it is materials
+for ornamenting a book. This little collection was
+read with avidity, it taught people to think, and to
+comprise their thoughts in a lively, precise, and delicate
+turn of expression. This was a merit which, before
+him, no one in Europe had attained since the revival
+of letters.”
+
+Dr. Johnson speaks of it as “the only book written
+by a man of fashion, of which professed authors need
+be jealous.”
+
+Lord Chesterfield, in his letters to his son, says,
+“Till you come to know mankind by your experience,
+I know no thing nor no man that can in the mean-
+time bring you so well acquainted with them as Le
+Duc de la Rochefoucauld. His little book of maxims,
+which I would advise you to look into for some
+moments at least every day of your life, is, I fear, too
+like and too exact a picture of human nature. I own
+it seems to degrade it, but yet my experience does not
+convince me that it degrades it unjustly.”
+
+Bishop Butler, on the other hand, blames the book
+in no measured terms. “There is a strange affecta-
+tion,” says the bishop, “in some people of explaining
+away all particular affection, and representing the
+whole life as nothing but one continued exercise
+of self-love. Hence arise that surprising confusion
+and perplexity in the Epicureans of old, Hobbes, the
+author of 'Reflexions Morales,' and the whole set
+of writers, of calling actions interested which are
+done of the most manifest known interest, merely for
+the gratification of a present passion.”
+
+The judgment the reader will be most inclined to
+adopt will perhaps be either that of Mr. Hallam, “Con-
+cise and energetic in expression, reduced to those
+short aphorisms which leave much to the reader's
+acuteness and yet save his labour, not often obscure,
+and never wearisome, an evident generalisation of
+long experience, without pedantry, without method,
+without deductive reasonings, yet wearing an appear-
+ance at least of profundity; they delight the intelli-
+gent though indolent man of the world, and must be
+read with some admiration by the philosopher . . . .
+yet they bear witness to the contracted observation
+and the precipitate inferences which an intercourse
+with a single class of society scarcely fails to generate.”
+Or that of Addison, who speaks of Rochefoucauld
+“as the great philosopher for administering consola-
+tion to the idle, the curious, and the worthless part of
+mankind.”
+
+We are fortunately in possession of materials such
+as rarely exist to enable us to form a judgment of
+Rochefoucauld's character. We have, with a vanity
+that could only exist in a Frenchman, a description
+or portrait of himself, of his own painting, and one of
+those inimitable living sketches in which his great
+enemy, Cardinal De Retz, makes all the chief actors in
+the court of the regency of Anne of Austria pass
+across the stage before us.
+
+We will first look on the portrait Rochefoucauld has
+left us of himself: “I am,” says he, “of a medium height,
+active, and well-proportioned. My complexion dark,
+but uniform, a high forehead; and of moderate height,
+black eyes, small, deep set, eyebrows black and thick
+but well placed. I am rather embarrassed in talking of
+my nose, for it is neither flat nor aquiline, nor large;
+nor pointed: but I believe, as far as I can say, it is too
+large than too small, and comes down just a trifle too
+low. I have a large mouth, lips generally red enough,
+neither shaped well nor badly. I have white teeth,
+and fairly even. I have been told I have a little too
+much chin. I have just looked at myself in the
+glass to ascertain the fact, and I do not know how to
+decide. As to the shape of my face, it is either
+square or oval, but which I should find it very diffi-
+cult to say. I have black hair, which curls by nature,
+and thick and long enough to entitle me to lay claim
+to a fine head. I have in my countenance somewhat
+of grief and pride, which gives many people an
+idea I despise them, although I am not at all given to
+do so. My gestures are very free, rather inclined to
+be too much so, for in speaking they make me use too
+much action. Such, candidly, I believe I am in out-
+ward appearance, and I believe it will be found that
+what I have said above of myself is not far from
+the real case. I shall use the same truthfulness in
+the remainder of my picture, for I have studied my-
+self sufficiently to know myself well; and I will lack
+neither boldness to speak as freely as I can of my
+good qualities, nor sincerity to freely avow that I
+have faults.
+
+“In the first place, to speak of my temper. I am
+melancholy, and I have hardly been seen for the last
+three or four years to laugh above three or four times.
+It seems to me that my melancholy would be even
+endurable and pleasant if I had none but what be-
+longed to me constitutionally; but it arises from so
+many other causes, fills my imagination in such a
+way, and possesses my mind so strongly that for the
+greater part of my time I remain without speaking a
+word, or give no meaning to what I say. I am ex-
+tremely reserved to those I do not know, and I am
+not very open with the greater part of those I do. It
+is a fault I know well, and I should neglect no means
+to correct myself of it; but as a certain gloomy air
+I have tends to make me seem more reserved than
+I am in fact, and as it is not in our power to rid
+ourselves of a bad expression that arises from a natu-
+ral conformation of features, I think that even when
+I have cured myself internally, externally some bad
+expression will always remain.
+
+“I have ability. I have no hesitation in saying it,
+as for what purpose should I pretend otherwise. So
+great circumvention, and so great depreciation, in
+speaking of the gifts one has, seems to me to hide a
+little vanity under an apparent modesty, and craftily
+to try to make others believe in greater virtues than
+are imputed to us. On my part I am content not to
+be considered better-looking than I am, nor of a bet-
+ter temper than I describe, nor more witty and clever
+than I am. Once more, I have ability, but a mind
+spoilt by melancholy, for though I know my own
+language tolerably well, and have a good memory, a
+mode of thought not particularly confused, I yet have
+so great a mixture of discontent that I often say what
+I have to say very badly.
+
+“The conversation of gentlemen is one of the plea-
+sures that most amuses me. I like it to be serious
+and morality to form the substance of it. Yet I
+also know how to enjoy it when trifling; and if I do
+not make many witty speeches, it is not because I do
+not appreciate the value of trifles well said, and that
+I do not find great amusement in that manner of rail-
+lery in which certain prompt and ready-witted per-
+sons excel so well. I write well in prose; I do well
+in verse; and if I was envious of the glory that
+springs from that quarter, I think with a little labour
+I could acquire some reputation. I like reading, in
+general; but that in which one finds something to
+polish the wit and strengthen the soul is what I like
+best. But, above all, I have the greatest pleasure in
+reading with an intelligent person, for then we reflect
+constantly upon what we read, and the observations
+we make form the most pleasant and useful form of
+conversation there is.
+
+“I am a fair critic of the works in verse and prose
+that are shown me; but perhaps I speak my opinion
+with almost too great freedom. Another fault in
+me is that I have sometimes a spirit of delicacy far
+too scrupulous, and a spirit of criticism far too severe.
+I do not dislike an argument, and I often of my own
+free will engage in one; but I generally back my
+opinion with too much warmth, and sometimes, when
+the wrong side is advocated against me, from the
+strength of my zeal for reason, I become a little un-
+reasonable myself.
+
+“I have virtuous sentiments, good inclinations, and
+so strong a desire to be a wholly good man that my
+friend cannot afford me a greater pleasure than can-
+didly to show me my faults. Those who know me
+most intimately, and those who have the goodness
+sometimes to give me the above advice, know that I
+always receive it with all the joy that could be ex-
+pected, and with all reverence of mind that could be
+desired.
+
+“I have all the passions pretty mildly, and pretty
+well under control. I am hardly ever seen in a rage,
+and I never hated any one. I am not, however, in-
+capable of avenging myself if I have been offended,
+or if my honour demanded I should resent an insult
+put upon me; on the contrary, I feel clear that duty
+would so well discharge the office of hatred in me
+that I should follow my revenge with even greater
+keenness than other people.
+
+“Ambition does not weary me. I fear but few
+things, and I do not fear death in the least. I am but
+little given to pity, and I could wish I was not so at
+all. Though there is nothing I would not do to com-
+fort an afflicted person, and I really believe that one
+should do all one can to show great sympathy to him
+for his misfortune, for miserable people are so foolish
+that this does them the greatest good in the world;
+yet I also hold that we should be content with ex-
+pressing sympathy, and carefully avoid having any.
+It is a passion that is wholly worthless in a well-regu-
+lated mind, which only serves to weaken the heart,
+and which should be left to ordinary persons, who, as
+they never do anything from reason, have need of
+passions to stimulate their actions.
+
+“I love my friends; and I love them to such an
+extent that I would not for a moment weigh my
+interest against theirs. I condescend to them, I
+patiently endure their bad temper. But, also, I do
+not make much of their caresses, and I do not feel
+great uneasiness in their absence.
+
+“Naturally, I have but little curiosity about the
+majority of things that stir up curiosity in other men.
+I am very secret, and I have less difficulty than most
+men in holding my tongue as to what is told me in
+confidence. I am most particular as to my word, and
+I would never fail, whatever might be the conse-
+quence, to do what I had promised; and I have made
+this an inflexible law during the whole of my life.
+
+“I keep the most punctilious civility to women. I
+do not believe I have ever said anything before them
+which could cause them annoyance. When their
+intellect is cultivated, I prefer their society to that of
+men: one there finds a mildness one does not meet
+with among ourselves, and it seems to me beyond this
+that they express themselves with more neatness, and
+give a more agreeable turn to the things they talk
+about. As for flirtation, I formerly indulged in a little,
+now I shall do so no more, though I am still young.
+I have renounced all flirtation, and I am simply
+astonished that there are still so many sensible people
+who can occupy their time with it.
+
+“I wholly approve of real loves; they indicate great-
+ness of soul, and although, in the uneasiness they give
+rise to, there is a something contrary to strict wisdom,
+they fit in so well with the most severe virtue, that I
+believe they cannot be censured with justice. To me
+who have known all that is fine and grand in the lofty
+aspirations of love, if I ever fall in love, it will as-
+suredly be in love of that nature. But in accordance
+with the present turn of my mind, I do not believe
+that the knowledge I have of it will ever change from
+my mind to my heart.”
+
+Such is his own description of himself. Let us
+now turn to the other picture, delineated by the man
+who was his bitterest enemy, and whom (we say it
+with regret) Rochefoucauld tried to murder.
+
+Cardinal De Retz thus paints him:--
+“In M. de la Rochefoucauld there was ever an
+indescribable something. From his infancy he always
+wanted to be mixed up with plots, at a time when he
+could not understand even the smallest interests (which
+has indeed never been his weak point,) or comprehend
+greater ones, which in another sense has never been
+his strong point. He was never fitted for any matter,
+and I really cannot tell the reason. His glance was
+not sufficiently wide, and he could not take in at once
+all that lay in his sight, but his good sense, perfect in
+theories, combined with his gentleness, his winning
+ways, his pleasing manners, which are perfect, should
+more than compensate for his lack of penetration.
+He always had a natural irresoluteness, but I cannot
+say to what this irresolution is to be attributed. It
+could not arise in him from the wealth of his imagina-
+tion, for that was anything but lively. I cannot put
+it down to the barrenness of his judgment, for,
+although he was not prompt in action, he had a good
+store of reason. We see the effects of this irresolution,
+although we cannot assign a cause for it. He was
+never a general, though a great soldier; never, na-
+turally, a good courtier, although he had always a good
+idea of being so. He was never a good partizan,
+although all his life engaged in intrigues. That air
+of pride and timidity which your see in his private
+life, is turned in business into an apologetic manner.
+He always believed he had need of it; and this, com-
+bined with his ‘Maxims,’ which show little faith in
+virtue, and his habitual custom, to give up matters
+with the same haste he undertook them, leads
+me to the conclusion that he would have done far
+better to have known his own mind, and have passed
+himself off, as he could have done, for the most
+polished courtier, the most agreeable man in private
+life that had appeared in his century.”
+
+It is but justice to the Cardinal to say, that the
+Duc is not painted in such dark colours as we should
+have expected, judging from what we know of the
+character of De Retz. With his marvellous power of
+depicting character, a power unrivalled, except by St.
+Simon and perhaps by Lord Clarendon, we should
+have expected the malignity of the priest would have
+stamped the features of his great enemy with the
+impress of infamy, and not have simply made him
+appear a courtier, weak, insincere, and nothing more.
+Though rather beyond our subject, the character of
+Cardinal de Retz, as delineated by Mdme. Sévigné, in
+one of her letters, will help us to form a true conclu-
+sion on the different characters of the Duc and the
+Cardinal. She says:--
+“Paul de Gondi Cardinal de Retz possesses great
+elevation of character, a certain extent of intellect, and
+more of the ostentation than of the true greatness of
+courage. He has an extraordinary memory, more
+energy than polish in his words, an easy humour,
+docility of character, and weakness in submitting to
+the complaints and reproaches of his friends, a little
+piety, some appearances of religion. He appears
+ambitious without being really so. Vanity and those
+who have guided him, have made him undertake great
+things, almost all opposed to his profession. He ex-
+cited the greatest troubles in the State without any
+design of turning them to account, and far from
+declaring himself the enemy of Cardinal Mazarin
+with any view of occupying his place, he thought of
+nothing but making himself an object of dread to
+him, and flattering himself with the false vanity of
+being his rival. He was clever enough, however, to
+take advantage of the public calamities to get himself
+made Cardinal. He endured his imprisonment with
+firmness, and owed his liberty solely to his own
+daring. In the obscurity of a life of wandering and
+concealment, his indolence for many years supported
+him with reputation. He preserved the Archbishopric
+of Paris against the power of Cardinal Mazarin, but
+after the death of that minister, he resigned it without
+knowing what he was doing, and without making use
+of the opportunity to promote the interests of him-
+self and his friends. He has taken part in several
+conclaves, and his conduct has always increased his
+reputation.
+
+“His natural bent is to indolence, nevertheless he
+labours with activity in pressing business, and reposes
+with indifference when it is concluded. He has great
+presence of mind, and knows so well how to turn it to
+his own advantage on all occasions presented him by
+fortune, that it would seem as if he had foreseen and
+desired them. He loves to narrate, and seeks to
+dazzle all his listeners indifferently by his extraor-
+dinary adventures, and his imagination often supplies
+him with more than his memory. The generality of
+his qualities are false, and what has most contributed
+to his reputation is his power of throwing a good light
+on his faults. He is insensible alike to hatred and to
+friendship, whatever pains he may be at to appear
+taken up with the one or the other. He is incapable
+of envy or avarice, whether from virtue or from care-
+lessness. He has borrowed more from his friends
+than a private person could ever hope to be able to
+repay; he has felt the vanity of acquiring so much on
+credit, and of undertaking to discharge it. He has
+neither taste nor refinement; he is amused by every-
+thing and pleased by nothing. He avoids difficult
+matters with considerable address, not allowing people
+to penetrate the slight acquaintance he has with every-
+thing. The retreat he has just made from the world
+is the most brilliant and the most unreal action of his
+life; it is a sacrifice he has made to his pride under
+the pretence of devotion; he quits the court to which
+he cannot attach himself, and retires from a world
+which is retiring from him.”
+
+The Maxims were first published in 1665, with a
+preface by Segrais. This preface was omitted in the
+subsequent editions. The first edition contained
+316 maxims, counting the last upon death, which
+was not numbered. The second in 1666 contained
+only 102; the third in 1671, and the fourth in
+1675, 413. In this last edition we first meet with
+the introductory maxim, “Our virtues are gene-
+rally but disguised vices.” The edition of 1678,
+the fifth, increased the number to 504. This was
+the last edition revised by the author, and pub-
+lished in his lifetime. The text of that edition has
+been used for the present translation. The next
+edition, the sixth, was published in 1693, about
+thirteen years after the author's death. This edition
+included fifty new maxims, attributed by the editor
+to Rochefoucauld. Most likely they were his writing,
+as the fact was never denied by his family, through
+whose permission they were published. They form
+the third supplement to the translation. This sixth
+edition was published by Claude Barbin, and the
+French editions since that time have been too nu-
+merous to be enumerated. The great popularity of
+the Maxims is perhaps best shown from the numerous
+translations that have been made of them. No less
+than eight English translations, or so-called transla-
+tions, have appeared; one American, a Swedish, and
+a Spanish translation, an Italian imitation, with
+parallel passages, and an English imitation by Hazlitt.
+The titles of the English editions are as follows:--
+i. Seneca Unmasked. By Mrs. Aphara Behn. Lon-
+ don, 1689. She calls the author the Duke of
+ Rushfucave.
+ii. Moral Maxims and Reflections, in four parts. By
+ the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Now made
+ English. London, 1694. 12 mo.
+iii. Moral Maxims and Reflections of the Duke de
+ la Rochefoucauld. Newly made English. Lon-
+ don, 1706. 12 mo.
+iv. Moral Maxims of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld.
+ Translated from the French. With notes. Lon-
+ don, 1749. 12 mo.
+v. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld. Revised and improved. London,
+ 1775. 8 vo.
+vi. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld. A new edition, revised and im-
+ proved, by L. D. London, 1781. 8 vo.
+vii. The Gentleman's Library. La Rochefoucauld's
+ Maxims and Moral Reflections. London, 1813.
+ 12 mo.
+viii.Moral Reflections, Sentences, and Maxims of
+ the Duke de la Rochefoucauld, newly translated
+ from the French; with an introduction and notes.
+ London, 1850. 16 mo.
+ix. Maxims and Moral Reflections of the Duke de la
+ Rochefoucauld: with a Memoir by the Chevalier
+ de Chatelain. London, 1868. 12 mo.
+
+The perusal of the Maxims will suggest to every
+reader to a greater or less degree, in accordance with
+the extent of his reading, parallel passages, and simi-
+lar ideas. Of ancient writers Rochefoucauld most
+strongly reminds us of Tacitus; of modern writers, Ju-
+nius most strongly reminds us of Rochefoucauld. Some
+examples from both are given in the notes to this trans-
+lation. It is curious to see how the expressions of the
+bitterest writer of English political satire to a great ex-
+tent express the same ideas as the great French satirist
+of private life. Had space permitted the parallel
+could have been drawn very closely, and much of the
+invective of Junius traced to its source in Rochefou-
+cauld.
+
+One of the persons whom Rochefoucauld patronised
+and protected, was the great French fabulist, La
+Fontaine. This patronage was repaid by La Fontaine
+giving, in one of his fables, “L'Homme et son Image,”
+an elaborate defence of his patron. After there depict-
+ing a man who fancied himself one of the most lovely
+in the world, and who complained he always found
+all mirrors untrustworthy, at last discovered his real
+image reflected in the water. He thus applies his
+fable:--
+“Je parle à tous: et cette erreur extrême,
+Est un mal que chacun se plait d'entretenir,
+Notre âme, c'est cet homme amoureux de lui même,
+Tant de miroirs, ce sont les sottises d'autrui.
+Miroirs, de nos défauts les peintres légitimes,
+Et quant au canal, c'est celui
+Qui chacun sait, le livre des MAXIMES.”
+
+It is just this: the book is a mirror in which we
+all see ourselves. This has made it so unpopular. It
+is too true. We dislike to be told of our faults,
+while we only like to be told of our neighbour's.
+Notwithstanding Rousseau's assertion, it is young
+men, who, before they know their own faults
+and only know their neighbours', that read and tho-
+roughly appreciate Rochefoucauld.
+
+After so many varied opinions he then pleases us more
+and seems far truer than he is in reality, it is impossible
+to give any general conclusion of such distinguished
+writers on the subject. Each reader will form his own
+opinion of the merits of the author and his book. To
+some, both will seem deserving of the highest praise; to
+others both will seem deserving of the highest censure.
+The truest judgment as to the author will be found in
+the remarks of a countryman of his own, as to the
+book in the remarks of a countryman of ours.
+
+As to the author, M. Sainte Beuve says:--“C'était un
+misanthrope poli, insinuant, souriant, qui précédait
+de bien peu et préparait avec charme l'autre MISAN-
+THROPE.”
+
+As to the book, Mr. Hallam says:--“Among the
+books in ancient and modern times which record the
+conclusions of observing men on the moral qualities
+of their fellows, a high place should be reserved for
+the Maxims of Rochefoucauld”.
+
+
+
+REFLECTIONS; OR, SENTENCES AND MORAL MAXIMS
+
+
+Our virtues are most frequently but vices disguised.
+
+[This epigraph which is the key to the system
+of La Rochefoucauld, is found in another form
+as No. 179 of the maxims of the first edition, 1665, it is
+omitted from the 2nd and 3rd, and reappears for the first
+time in the 4th edition, in 1675, as at present, at the head
+of the Reflections.--AIMÉ MARTIN. Its best answer is ar-
+rived at by reversing the predicate and the subject, and
+you at once form a contradictory maxim equally true, our
+vices are most frequently but virtues disguised.]
+
+1.--What we term virtue is often but a mass of
+various actions and divers interests, which fortune, or
+our own industry, manage to arrange; and it is not
+always from valour or from chastity that men are
+brave, and women chaste.
+
+“Who combats bravely is not therefore brave,
+He dreads a death-bed like the meanest slave;
+Who reasons wisely is not therefore wise,
+His pride in reasoning, not in acting, lies.”
+ Pope, MORAL ESSAYS, Ep. i. line 115.
+
+2.--Self-love is the greatest of flatterers.
+
+3.--Whatever discoveries have been made in the
+region of self-love, there remain many unexplored ter-
+ritories there.
+
+[This is the first hint of the system the author tries to
+develope. He wishes to find in vice a motive for all our
+actions, but this does not suffice him; he is obliged to call
+other passions to the help of his system and to confound
+pride, vanity, interest and egotism with self love. This
+confusion destroys the unity of his principle.--AIMÉ
+MARTIN.]
+
+4.--Self love is more cunning than the most cunning
+man in the world.
+
+5.--The duration of our passions is no more de-
+pendant upon us than the duration of our life.
+[Then what becomes of free will?--AIMÉ MARTIN]
+
+6.--Passion often renders the most clever man a
+fool, and even sometimes renders the most foolish man
+clever.
+
+7.--Great and striking actions which dazzle the
+eyes are represented by politicians as the effect of
+great designs, instead of which they are commonly
+caused by the temper and the passions. Thus the war
+between Augustus and Anthony, which is set down to
+the ambition they entertained of making themselves
+masters of the world, was probably but an effect of
+jealousy.
+
+8.--The passions are the only advocates which
+always persuade. They are a natural art, the rules
+of which are infallible; and the simplest man with
+passion will be more persuasive than the most eloquent
+without.
+
+[See Maxim 249 which is an illustration of this.]
+
+9.--The passions possess a certain injustice and
+self interest which makes it dangerous to follow them,
+and in reality we should distrust them even when
+they appear most trustworthy.
+
+10.--In the human heart there is a perpetual gene-
+ration of passions; so that the ruin of one is almost
+always the foundation of another.
+
+11.--Passions often produce their contraries: ava-
+rice sometimes leads to prodigality, and prodigality to
+avarice; we are often obstinate through weakness
+and daring though timidity.
+
+12.--Whatever care we take to conceal our pas-
+sions under the appearances of piety and honour, they
+are always to be seen through these veils.
+
+[The 1st edition, 1665, preserves the image perhaps
+better--“however we may conceal our passions under the
+veil, etc., there is always some place where they peep out.”]
+
+13.--Our self love endures more impatiently the
+condemnation of our tastes than of our opinions.
+
+14.--Men are not only prone to forget benefits and
+injuries; they even hate those who have obliged them,
+and cease to hate those who have injured them. The
+necessity of revenging an injury or of recompensing
+a benefit seems a slavery to which they are unwilling
+to submit.
+
+15.--The clemency of Princes is often but policy
+to win the affections of the people.
+
+[“So many are the advantages which monarchs gain by
+clemency, so greatly does it raise their fame and endear
+them to their subjects, that it is generally happy for them
+to have an opportunity of displaying it.”--Montesquieu,
+ESPRIT DES LOIS, LIB. VI., C. 21.]
+
+16.--This clemency of which they make a merit,
+arises oftentimes from vanity, sometimes from idle-
+ness, oftentimes from fear, and almost always from all
+three combined.
+
+[La Rochefoucauld is content to paint the age in which
+he lived. Here the clemency spoken of is nothing more
+than an expression of the policy of Anne of Austria.
+Rochefoucauld had sacrificed all to her; even the favour
+of Cardinal Richelieu, but when she became regent she be-
+stowed her favours upon those she hated; her friends were
+forgotten.--AIMÉ MARTIN. The reader will hereby see
+that the age in which the writer lived best interprets his
+maxims.]
+
+17.--The moderation of those who are happy arises
+from the calm which good fortune bestows upon their
+temper.
+
+18.--Moderation is caused by the fear of exciting
+the envy and contempt which those merit who are
+intoxicated with their good fortune; it is a vain dis-
+play of our strength of mind, and in short the mo-
+deration of men at their greatest height is only a
+desire to appear greater than their fortune.
+
+19.--We have all sufficient strength to support the
+misfortunes of others.
+
+[The strongest example of this is the passage in Lucre-
+tius, lib. ii., line I:--
+ “Suave mari magno turbantibus aequora ventis
+ E terra magnum alterius spectare laborem.”]
+
+20.--The constancy of the wise is only the talent of
+concealing the agitation of their hearts.
+
+[Thus wisdom is only hypocrisy, says a commentator.
+This definition of constancy is a result of maxim 18.]
+
+21.--Those who are condemned to death affect some-
+times a constancy and contempt for death which is
+only the fear of facing it; so that one may say that
+this constancy and contempt are to their mind what
+the bandage is to their eyes.
+
+[See this thought elaborated in maxim 504.]
+
+22.--Philosophy triumphs easily over past evils and
+future evils; but present evils triumph over it.
+
+23.--Few people know death, we only endure it,
+usually from determination, and even from stupidity
+and custom; and most men only die because they
+know not how to prevent dying.
+
+24.--When great men permit themselves to be cast
+down by the continuance of misfortune, they show
+us that they were only sustained by ambition, and not
+by their mind; so that PLUS a great vanity, heroes
+are made like other men.
+
+[Both these maxims have been rewritten and made
+conciser by the author; the variations are not worth
+quoting.]
+
+25.--We need greater virtues to sustain good than
+evil fortune.
+
+[“Prosperity do{th} best discover vice, but adversity do{th}
+best discover virtue.”--Lord Bacon, ESSAYS{, (1625), “Of
+Adversity”}.]
+
+{The quotation wrongly had “does” for “doth”.}
+
+26.--Neither the sun nor death can be looked at
+without winking.
+
+27.--People are often vain of their passions, even
+of the worst, but envy is a passion so timid and
+shame-faced that no one ever dare avow her.
+
+28.--Jealousy is in a manner just and reasonable,
+as it tends to preserve a good which belongs, or
+which we believe belongs to us, on the other hand
+envy is a fury which cannot endure the happiness of
+others.
+
+29.--The evil that we do does not attract to us so
+much persecution and hatred as our good qualities.
+
+30.--We have more strength than will; and it is
+often merely for an excuse we say things are impos-
+sible.
+
+31.--If we had no faults we should not take so much
+pleasure in noting those of others.
+
+32.--Jealousy lives upon doubt; and comes to an
+end or becomes a fury as soon as it passes from
+doubt to certainty.
+
+33.--Pride indemnifies itself and loses nothing even
+when it casts away vanity.
+
+[See maxim 450, where the author states, what we take
+from our other faults we add to our pride.]
+
+34.--If we had no pride we should not complain of
+that of others.
+
+[“The proud are ever most provoked by pride.”-Cow-
+per, CONVERSATION 160.]
+
+35.--Pride is much the same in all men, the only
+difference is the method and manner of showing it.
+
+[“Pride bestowed on all a common friend.”--Pope,
+ESSAY ON MAN, Ep. ii., line 273.]
+
+36.--It would seem that nature, which has so wisely
+ordered the organs of our body for our happiness, has
+also given us pride to spare us the mortification of
+knowing our imperfections.
+
+37.--Pride has a larger part than goodness in our
+remonstrances with those who commit faults, and we
+reprove them not so much to correct as to persuade
+them that we ourselves are free from faults.
+
+38.--We promise according to our hopes; we per-
+form according to our fears.
+
+[“The reason why the Cardinal (Mazarin) deferred so long
+to grant the favours he had promised, was because he was
+persuaded that hope was much more capable of keeping
+men to their duty than gratitude.”--FRAGMENTS HISTORIQUES.
+RACINE.]
+
+39.--Interest speaks all sorts of tongues and plays
+all sorts of characters; even that of disinterestedness.
+
+40.--Interest blinds some and makes some see.
+
+41.--Those who apply themselves too closely to
+little things often become incapable of great things.
+
+42.--We have not enough strength to follow all our
+reason.
+
+43.--A man often believes himself leader when he
+is led; as his mind endeavours to reach one goal, his
+heart insensibly drags him towards another.
+
+
+44.--Strength and weakness of mind are mis-named;
+they are really only the good or happy arrangement of
+our bodily organs.
+
+45.--The caprice of our temper is even more whim-
+sical than that of Fortune.
+
+46.--The attachment or indifference which philoso-
+phers have shown to life is only the style of their self
+love, about which we can no more dispute than of that
+of the palate or of the choice of colours.
+
+47.--Our temper sets a price upon every gift that
+we receive from fortune.
+
+48.--Happiness is in the taste, and not in the things
+themselves; we are happy from possessing what we
+like, not from possessing what others like.
+
+49.--We are never so happy or so unhappy as we
+suppose.
+
+50.--Those who think they have merit persuade
+themselves that they are honoured by being unhappy,
+in order to persuade others and themselves that they
+are worthy to be the butt of fortune.
+
+[“Ambition has been so strong as to make very miserable
+men take comfort that they were supreme in misery; and
+certain it is{, that where} we cannot distinguish ourselves by some-
+thing excellent, we begin to take a complacency in some
+singular infirmities, follies, or defects of one kind or other.”
+--Burke, {ON THE SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL, (1756), Part I, Sect. XVII}.]
+
+{The translators' incorrectly cite SPEECH ON CONCILIATION WITH
+AMERICA. Also, Burke does not actually write “Ambition has been...”,
+he writes “It has been...” when speaking of ambition.}
+
+51.--Nothing should so much diminish the satisfac-
+tion which we feel with ourselves as seeing that we
+disapprove at one time of that which we approve of
+at another.
+
+52.--Whatever difference there appears in our for-
+tunes, there is nevertheless a certain compensation of
+good and evil which renders them equal.
+
+53.--Whatever great advantages nature may give,
+it is not she alone, but fortune also that makes the
+hero.
+
+54.--The contempt of riches in philosophers was
+only a hidden desire to avenge their merit upon the
+injustice of fortune, by despising the very goods of
+which fortune had deprived them; it was a secret to
+guard themselves against the degradation of poverty,
+it was a back way by which to arrive at that distinc-
+tion which they could not gain by riches.
+
+[“It is always easy as well as agreeable for the inferior
+ranks of mankind to claim merit from the contempt of that
+pomp and pleasure which fortune has placed beyond their
+reach. The virtue of the primitive Christians, like that of
+the first Romans, was very frequently guarded by poverty
+and ignorance.”--Gibbon, DECLINE AND FALL, CHAP. 15.]
+
+55.--The hate of favourites is only a love of favour.
+The envy of NOT possessing it, consoles and softens its
+regrets by the contempt it evinces for those who pos-
+sess it, and we refuse them our homage, not being able
+to detract from them what attracts that of the rest of
+the world.
+
+56.--To establish ourselves in the world we do
+everything to appear as if we were established.
+
+57.--Although men flatter themselves with their
+great actions, they are not so often the result of a
+great design as of chance.
+
+58.--It would seem that our actions have lucky or
+unlucky stars to which they owe a great part of the
+blame or praise which is given them.
+
+59.--There are no accidents so unfortunate from
+which skilful men will not draw some advantage, nor
+so fortunate that foolish men will not turn them to
+their hurt.
+
+60.--Fortune turns all things to the advantage of
+those on whom she smiles.
+
+61.--The happiness or unhappiness of men depends
+no less upon their dispositions than their fortunes.
+
+[“Still to ourselves in every place consigned
+ Our own felicity we make or find.”
+ Goldsmith, TRAVELLER, 431.]
+
+62.--Sincerity is an openness of heart; we find it in
+very few people; what we usually see is only an artful
+dissimulation to win the confidence of others.
+
+63.--The aversion to lying is often a hidden ambi-
+tion to render our words credible and weighty, and
+to attach a religious aspect to our conversation.
+
+64.--Truth does not do as much good in the world,
+as its counterfeits do evil.
+
+65.--There is no praise we have not lavished upon
+Prudence; and yet she cannot assure to us the most
+trifling event.
+
+[The author corrected this maxim several times, in 1665
+it is No. 75; 1666, No. 66; 1671-5, No. 65; in the last
+edition it stands as at present. In the first he quotes
+Juvenal, Sat. X., line 315.
+ “ Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia, nos te;
+ Nos facimus, Fortuna, deam, coeloque locamus.”
+Applying to Prudence what Juvenal does to Fortune, and
+with much greater force.]
+
+66.--A clever man ought to so regulate his interests
+that each will fall in due order. Our greediness so
+often troubles us, making us run after so many things
+at the same time, that while we too eagerly look after
+the least we miss the greatest.
+
+67.--What grace is to the body good sense is to the
+mind.
+
+68.--It is difficult to define love; all we can say is,
+that in the soul it is a desire to rule, in the mind it is
+a sympathy, and in the body it is a hidden and deli-
+cate wish to possess what we love--PLUS many
+mysteries.
+
+[“Love is the love of one {singularly,} with desire to be
+singularly beloved.”--Hobbes{, LEVIATHAN, (1651), Part I,
+Chapter VI}.]
+
+{Two notes about this quotation: (1) the translators' mistakenly
+have “singularity” for the first “singularly” and (2) Hobbes does
+not actually write “Love is the...”--he writes “Love of one...”
+under the heading “The passion of Love.”}
+
+69.--If there is a pure love, exempt from the mix-
+ture of our other passions, it is that which is concealed
+at the bottom of the heart and of which even our-
+selves are ignorant.
+
+70.--There is no disguise which can long hide love
+where it exists, nor feign it where it does not.
+
+71.--There are few people who would not be
+ashamed of being beloved when they love no longer.
+
+72.--If we judge of love by the majority of its
+results it rather resembles hatred than friendship.
+
+73.--We may find women who have never indulged
+in an intrigue, but it is rare to find those who have
+intrigued but once.
+
+[“Yet there are some, they say, who have had {NONE};
+But those who have, ne'er end with only {ONE}.”
+ {--Lord Byron, }DON JUAN, {Canto} iii., stanza 4.]
+
+74.--There is only one sort of love, but there are a
+thousand different copies.
+
+75.--Neither love nor fire can subsist without per-
+petual motion; both cease to live so soon as they cease
+to hope, or to fear.
+
+[So Lord Byron{, STANZAS, (1819), stanza 3} says of Love--
+ “Like chiefs of faction,
+ His life is action.”]
+
+76.--There is real love just as there are real ghosts;
+every person speaks of it, few persons have seen it.
+
+[“Oh Love! no habitant of earth thou art--
+ An unseen seraph, we believe in thee--
+ A faith whose martyrs are the broken heart,--
+ But never yet hath seen, nor e'er shall see
+ The naked eye, thy form as it should be.”
+ {--Lord Byron, }CHILDE HAROLD, {Canto} iv., stanza 121.]
+
+77.--Love lends its name to an infinite number of
+engagements (COMMERCES) which are attributed to it,
+but with which it has no more concern than the Doge
+has with all that is done in Venice.
+
+78.--The love of justice is simply in the majority of
+men the fear of suffering injustice.
+
+79.--Silence is the best resolve for him who distrusts
+himself.
+
+80.--What renders us so changeable in our friend-
+ship is, that it is difficult to know the qualities of the
+soul, but easy to know those of the mind.
+
+81.--We can love nothing but what agrees with us,
+and we can only follow our taste or our pleasure when
+we prefer our friends to ourselves; nevertheless it is
+only by that preference that friendship can be true
+and perfect.
+
+82.--Reconciliation with our enemies is but a desire
+to better our condition, a weariness of war, the fear
+of some unlucky accident.
+
+[“Thus terminated that famous war of the Fronde. * *
+The Duke de la Rochefoucauld desired peace because of
+his dangerous wounds and ruined castles, which had made
+him dread even worse events. On the other side the
+Queen, who had shown herself so ungrateful to her too
+ambitious friends, did not cease to feel the bitterness of
+their resentment. ‘I wish,’ said she, ‘it were always
+night, because daylight shows me so many who have
+betrayed me.’”--MEMOIRES DE MADAME DE MOTTEVILLE, TOM.
+IV., p. 60. Another proof that although these maxims
+are in some cases of universal application, they were based
+entirely on the experience of the age in which the author
+lived.]
+
+83.--What men term friendship is merely a partner-
+ship with a collection of reciprocal interests, and an
+exchange of favours--in fact it is but a trade in which
+self love always expects to gain something.
+
+84.--It is more disgraceful to distrust than to be
+deceived by our friends.
+
+85.--We often persuade ourselves to love people
+who are more powerful than we are, yet interest alone
+produces our friendship; we do not give our hearts
+away for the good we wish to do, but for that we ex-
+pect to receive.
+
+86.--Our distrust of another justifies his deceit.
+
+87.--Men would not live long in society were they
+not the dupes of each other.
+
+[A maxim, adds Aimé Martin, “Which may enter into
+the code of a vulgar rogue, but one is astonished to find
+it in a moral treatise.” Yet we have scriptural authority
+for it: “Deceiving and being deceived.”--2 TIM. iii. 13.]
+
+88.--Self love increases or diminishes for us the
+good qualities of our friends, in proportion to the
+satisfaction we feel with them, and we judge of their
+merit by the manner in which they act towards us.
+
+89.--Everyone blames his memory, no one blames
+his judgment.
+
+90.--In the intercourse of life, we please more by
+our faults than by our good qualities.
+
+91.--The largest ambition has the least appearance
+of ambition when it meets with an absolute impossi-
+bility in compassing its object.
+
+92.--To awaken a man who is deceived as to his
+own merit is to do him as bad a turn as that done
+to the Athenian madman who was happy in believing
+that all the ships touching at the port belonged to him.
+
+[That is, they cured him. The madman was Thrasyllus,
+son of Pythodorus. His brother Crito cured him, when
+he infinitely regretted the time of his more pleasant mad-
+ness.--See Aelian, VAR. HIST. iv. 25. So Horace--
+ -------------“Pol, me occidistis, amici,
+ Non servastis,” ait, “cui sic extorta voluptas
+ Et demptus per vim mentis gratissimus error.”
+ HOR. EP. ii--2, 138,
+of the madman who was cured of a pleasant lunacy.]
+
+93.--Old men delight in giving good advice as a
+consolation for the fact that they can no longer set
+bad examples.
+
+94.--Great names degrade instead of elevating those
+who know not how to sustain them.
+
+95.--The test of extraordinary merit is to see those
+who envy it the most yet obliged to praise it.
+
+96.--A man is perhaps ungrateful, but often less
+chargeable with ingratitude than his benefactor is.
+
+97.--We are deceived if we think that mind and
+judgment are two different matters: judgment is but
+the extent of the light of the mind. This light pene-
+trates to the bottom of matters; it remarks all that
+can be remarked, and perceives what appears imper-
+ceptible. Therefore we must agree that it is the ex-
+tent of the light in the mind that produces all the
+effects which we attribute to judgment.
+
+98.--Everyone praises his heart, none dare praise
+their understanding.
+
+99.--Politeness of mind consists in thinking chaste
+and refined thoughts.
+
+100.--Gallantry of mind is saying the most empty
+things in an agreeable manner.
+
+101.--Ideas often flash across our minds more com-
+plete than we could make them after much labour.
+
+102.--The head is ever the dupe of the heart.
+
+[A feeble imitation of that great thought “All folly
+comes from the heart.”--AIMÉ MARTIN. But Bonhome, in his
+L'ART DE PENSER, says “Plusieurs diraient en période quarré
+que quelques reflexions que fasse l'esprit et quelques resolu-
+tions qu'il prenne pour corriger ses travers le premier sen-
+timent du coeur renverse tous ses projets. Mais il n'appar-
+tient qu'a M. de la Rochefoucauld de dire tout en un mot
+que l'esprit est toujours la dupe du coeur.”]
+
+103.--Those who know their minds do not neces-
+sarily know their hearts.
+
+104.--Men and things have each their proper per-
+spective; to judge rightly of some it is necessary to
+see them near, of others we can never judge rightly
+but at a distance.
+
+105.--A man for whom accident discovers sense, is
+not a rational being. A man only is so who under-
+stands, who distinguishes, who tests it.
+
+106.--To understand matters rightly we should
+understand their details, and as that knowledge is
+almost infinite, our knowledge is always superficial
+and imperfect.
+
+107.--One kind of flirtation is to boast we never
+flirt.
+
+108.--The head cannot long play the part of the
+heart.
+
+109.--Youth changes its tastes by the warmth of its
+blood, age retains its tastes by habit.
+
+110.--Nothing is given so profusely as advice.
+
+111.--The more we love a woman the more prone
+we are to hate her.
+
+112.--The blemishes of the mind, like those of the
+face, increase by age.
+
+113.--There may be good but there are no pleasant
+marriages.
+
+114.--We are inconsolable at being deceived by our
+enemies and betrayed by our friends, yet still we are
+often content to be thus served by ourselves.
+
+115.--It is as easy unwittingly to deceive oneself as
+to deceive others.
+
+116.--Nothing is less sincere than the way of asking
+and giving advice. The person asking seems to pay
+deference to the opinion of his friend, while thinking
+in reality of making his friend approve his opinion
+and be responsible for his conduct. The person
+giving the advice returns the confidence placed in him
+by eager and disinterested zeal, in doing which he is
+usually guided only by his own interest or reputation.
+
+[“I have often thought how ill-natured a maxim it was
+which on many occasions I have heard from people of
+good understanding, ‘That as to what related to private
+conduct no one was ever the better for advice.’ But upon
+further examination I have resolved with myself that the
+maxim might be admitted without any violent prejudice
+to mankind. For in the manner advice was generally given
+there was no reason I thought to wonder it should be so
+ill received, something there was which strangely inverted
+the case, and made the giver to be the only gainer. For
+by what I could observe in many occurrences of our lives,
+that which we called giving advice was properly taking an
+occasion to show our own wisdom at another's expense.
+On the other side to be instructed or to receive advice on
+the terms usually prescribed to us was little better than
+tamely to afford another the occasion of raising himself a
+character from our defects.”--Lord Shaftesbury, CHARAC-
+TERISTICS, i., 153.]
+
+117.--The most subtle of our acts is to simulate
+blindness for snares that we know are set for us. We
+are never so easily deceived as when trying to deceive.
+
+118.--The intention of never deceiving often exposes
+us to deception.
+
+119.--We become so accustomed to disguise ourselves
+to others that at last we are disguised to ourselves.
+
+[“Those who quit their proper character{,} to assume what
+does not belong to them, are{,} for the greater part{,} ignorant
+both of the character they leave{,} and of the character they
+assume.”--Burke, {REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION IN FRANCE, (1790),
+Paragraph 19}.]
+
+{The translators' incorrectly cite THOUGHTS ON THE CAUSE
+OF THE PRESENT DISCONTENTS.}
+
+120.--We often act treacherously more from weak-
+ness than from a fixed motive.
+
+121.--We frequently do good to enable us with
+impunity to do evil.
+
+122.--If we conquer our passions it is more from
+their weakness than from our strength.
+
+123.--If we never flattered ourselves we should have
+but scant pleasure.
+
+124.--The most deceitful persons spend their lives
+in blaming deceit, so as to use it on some great occa-
+sion to promote some great interest.
+
+125.--The daily employment of cunning marks a
+little mind, it generally happens that those who resort
+to it in one respect to protect themselves lay them-
+selves open to attack in another.
+
+[“With that low cunning which in fools supplies,
+ And amply, too, the place of being wise.”
+ Churchill, ROSCIAD, 117.]
+
+126.--Cunning and treachery are the offspring of
+incapacity.
+
+127.--The true way to be deceived is to think one-
+self more knowing than others.
+
+128.--Too great cleverness is but deceptive delicacy,
+true delicacy is the most substantial cleverness.
+
+129.--It is sometimes necessary to play the fool to
+avoid being deceived by cunning men.
+
+130.--Weakness is the only fault which cannot be
+cured.
+
+131.--The smallest fault of women who give them-
+selves up to love is to love.
+ [------“Faciunt graviora coactae
+ Imperio sexus minimumque libidine peccant.”
+ Juvenal, SAT. vi., 134.]
+
+132.--It is far easier to be wise for others than to
+be so for oneself.
+
+[Hence the proverb, “A man who is his own lawyer
+has a fool for his client.”]
+
+133.--The only good examples are those, that make
+us see the absurdity of bad originals.
+
+134.--We are never so ridiculous from the habits we
+have as from those that we affect to have.
+
+135.--We sometimes differ more widely from our-
+selves than we do from others.
+
+136.--There are some who never would have loved
+if they never had heard it spoken of.
+
+137.--When not prompted by vanity we say little.
+
+138.--A man would rather say evil of himself than
+say nothing.
+
+[“Montaigne's vanity led him to talk perpetually of
+himself, and as often happens to vain men, he would rather
+talk of his own failings than of any foreign subject.”--
+Hallam, LITERATURE OF EUROPE.]
+
+139.--One of the reasons that we find so few
+persons rational and agreeable in conversation is
+there is hardly a person who does not think more of
+what he wants to say than of his answer to what is
+said. The most clever and polite are content with
+only seeming attentive while we perceive in their
+mind and eyes that at the very time they are wander-
+ing from what is said and desire to return to what they
+want to say. Instead of considering that the worst
+way to persuade or please others is to try thus strongly
+to please ourselves, and that to listen well and to
+answer well are some of the greatest charms we can
+have in conversation.
+
+[“An absent man can make but few observations, he can
+pursue nothing steadily because his absences make him
+lose his way. They are very disagreeable and hardly to be
+tolerated in old age, but in youth they cannot be forgiven.”
+--Lord Chesterfield, LETTER 195.]
+
+140.--If it was not for the company of fools, a witty
+man would often be greatly at a loss.
+
+141.--We often boast that we are never bored, but
+yet we are so conceited that we do not perceive how
+often we bore others.
+
+142.--As it is the mark of great minds to say many
+things in a few words, so it is that of little minds to
+use many words to say nothing.
+
+[“So much they talked, so very little said.”
+ Churchill, ROSCIAD, 550.
+
+“Men who are unequal to the labour of discussing an ar-
+gument or wish to avoid it, are willing enough to suppose
+that much has been proved because much has been said.”--
+ Junius, JAN. 1769.]
+
+143.--It is oftener by the estimation of our own
+feelings that we exaggerate the good qualities of others
+than by their merit, and when we praise them we wish
+to attract their praise.
+
+144.--We do not like to praise, and we never praise
+without a motive. Praise is flattery, artful, hidden,
+delicate, which gratifies differently him who praises
+and him who is praised. The one takes it as the re-
+ward of merit, the other bestows it to show his im-
+partiality and knowledge.
+
+145.--We often select envenomed praise which, by
+a reaction upon those we praise, shows faults we could
+not have shown by other means.
+
+146.--Usually we only praise to be praised.
+
+147.--Few are sufficiently wise to prefer censure
+which is useful to praise which is treacherous.
+
+148.--Some reproaches praise; some praises re-
+proach.
+
+[“Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer,
+ And, without sneering, teach the rest to sneer.”
+ Pope {ESSAY ON MAN, (1733), EPISTLE TO DR. ARBUTHNOT.}]
+
+149.--The refusal of praise is only the wish to be
+praised twice.
+
+[The modesty which pretends to refuse praise is but in
+truth a desire to be praised more highly. EDITION 1665.]
+
+150.--The desire which urges us to deserve praise
+strengthens our good qualities, and praise given to
+wit, valour, and beauty, tends to increase them.
+
+151.--It is easier to govern others than to prevent
+being governed.
+
+152.--If we never flattered ourselves the flattery of
+others would not hurt us.
+
+[“Adulatione servilia fingebant securi de fragilitate cre-
+dentis.” Tacit. Ann. xvi.]
+
+153.--Nature makes merit but fortune sets it to
+work.
+
+154.--Fortune cures us of many faults that reason
+could not.
+
+155.--There are some persons who only disgust with
+their abilities, there are persons who please even with
+their faults.
+
+156.--There are persons whose only merit consists
+in saying and doing stupid things at the right time,
+and who ruin all if they change their manners.
+
+157.--The fame of great men ought always to be
+estimated by the means used to acquire it.
+
+158.--Flattery is base coin to which only our vanity
+gives currency.
+
+159.--It is not enough to have great qualities, we
+should also have the management of them.
+
+160.--However brilliant an action it should not be
+esteemed great unless the result of a great motive.
+
+161.--A certain harmony should be kept between
+actions and ideas if we desire to estimate the effects
+that they produce.
+
+162.--The art of using moderate abilities to advan-
+tage wins praise, and often acquires more reputation
+than real brilliancy.
+
+163.--Numberless arts appear foolish whose secre{t}
+motives are most wise and weighty.
+
+164.--It is much easier to seem fitted for posts we
+do not fill than for those we do.
+
+165.--Ability wins us the esteem of the true men,
+luck that of the people.
+
+166.--The world oftener rewards the appearance of
+merit than merit itself.
+
+167.--Avarice is more opposed to economy than to
+liberality.
+
+168.--However deceitful hope may be, yet she
+carries us on pleasantly to the end of life.
+
+[“Hope travels through, nor quits us when we die.”
+ Pope: ESSAY ON MAN, Ep. ii.]
+
+169.--Idleness and fear keeps us in the path of duty,
+but our virtue often gets the praise.
+
+[“Quod segnitia erat sapientia vocaretur.”
+ Tacitus Hist. I.]
+
+170.--If one acts rightly and honestly, it is difficult
+to decide whether it is the effect of integrity or skill.
+
+171.--As rivers are lost in the sea so are virtues in
+self.
+
+172.--If we thoroughly consider the varied effects
+of indifference we find we miscarry more in our duties
+than in our interests.
+
+173.--There are different kinds of curiosity: one
+springs from interest, which makes us desire to know
+everything that may be profitable to us; another from
+pride, which springs from a desire of knowing what
+others are ignorant of.
+
+174.--It is far better to accustom our mind to bear
+the ills we have than to speculate on those which may
+befall us.
+
+ [“Rather bear th{ose} ills we have
+ Than fly to others that we know not of.”
+ {--Shakespeare, HAMLET, Act III, Scene I, Hamlet.}]
+
+175.--Constancy in love is a perpetual inconstancy
+which causes our heart to attach itself to all the quali-
+ties of the person we love in succession, sometimes
+giving the preference to one, sometimes to another.
+This constancy is merely inconstancy fixed, and limited
+to the same person.
+
+176.--There are two kinds of constancy in love, one
+arising from incessantly finding in the loved one fresh
+objects to love, the other from regarding it as a point
+of honour to be constant.
+
+177.--Perseverance is not deserving of blame or
+praise, as it is merely the continuance of tastes and
+feelings which we can neither create or destroy.
+
+178.--What makes us like new studies is not so
+much the weariness we have of the old or the wish
+for change as the desire to be admired by those who
+know more than ourselves, and the hope of advantage
+over those who know less.
+
+179.--We sometimes complain of the levity of our
+friends to justify our own by anticipation.
+
+180.--Our repentance is not so much sorrow for the
+ill we have done as fear of the ill that may happen to
+us.
+
+181.--One sort of inconstancy springs from levity or
+weakness of mind, and makes us accept everyone's
+opinion, and another more excusable comes from a
+surfeit of matter.
+
+182.--Vices enter into the composition of virtues as
+poison into that of medicines. Prudence collects and
+blends the two and renders them useful against the ills
+of life.
+
+183.--For the credit of virtue we must admit that
+the greatest misfortunes of men are those into which
+they fall through their crimes.
+
+184.--We admit our faults to repair by our sincerity
+the evil we have done in the opinion of others.
+
+[In the edition of 1665 this maxim stands as No. 200.
+We never admit our faults except through vanity.]
+
+185.--There are both heroes of evil and heroes of
+good.
+
+[Ut alios industria ita hunc ignavia protulerat ad famam,
+habebaturque non ganeo et profligator sed erudito luxu.
+--Tacit. Ann. xvi.]
+
+186.--We do not despise all who have vices, but we
+do despise all who have not virtues.
+
+[“If individuals have no virtues their vices may be of
+use to us.”--JUNIUS, 5th Oct. 1771.]
+
+187.--The name of virtue is as useful to our interest
+as that of vice.
+
+188.--The health of the mind is not less uncertain
+than that of the body, and when passions seem
+furthest removed we are no less in danger of infec-
+tion than of falling ill when we are well.
+
+189.--It seems that nature has at man's birth fixed
+the bounds of his virtues and vices.
+
+190.--Great men should not have great faults.
+
+191.--We may say vices wait on us in the course of
+our life as the landlords with whom we successively
+lodge, and if we travelled the road twice over I
+doubt if our experience would make us avoid them.
+
+192.--When our vices leave us we flatter ourselves
+with the idea we have left them.
+
+193.--There are relapses in the diseases of the mind
+as in those of the body; what we call a cure is often
+no more than an intermission or change of disease.
+
+194.--The defects of the mind are like the wounds
+of the body. Whatever care we take to heal them
+the scars ever remain, and there is always danger of
+their reopening.
+
+195.--The reason which often prevents us abandon-
+ing a single vice is having so many.
+
+196.--We easily forget those faults which are known
+only to ourselves.
+
+[Seneca says “Innocentem quisque se dicit respiciens
+testem non conscientiam.”]
+
+197.--There are men of whom we can never believe
+evil without having seen it. Yet there are very few
+in whom we should be surprised to see it.
+
+198.--We exaggerate the glory of some men to
+detract from that of others, and we should praise
+Prince Condé and Marshal Turenne much less if we
+did not want to blame them both.
+
+[The allusion to Condé and Turenne gives the date at
+which these maxims were published in 1665. Condé and
+Turenne were after their campaign with the Imperialists
+at the height of their fame. It proves the truth of the
+remark of Tacitus, “Populus neminem sine aemulo sinit.”--
+Tac. Ann. xiv.]
+
+199.--The desire to appear clever often prevents our
+being so.
+
+200.--Virtue would not go far did not vanity
+escort her.
+
+201.--He who thinks he has the power to content
+the world greatly deceives himself, but he who thinks
+that the world cannot be content with him deceives
+himself yet more.
+
+202.--Falsely honest men are those who disguise
+their faults both to themselves and others; truly honest
+men are those who know them perfectly and confess
+them.
+
+203.--He is really wise who is nettled at nothing.
+
+204.--The coldness of women is a balance and bur-
+den they add to their beauty.
+
+205.--Virtue in woman is often the love of reputa-
+tion and repose.
+
+206.--He is a truly good man who desires always to
+bear the inspection of good men.
+
+207.--Folly follows us at all stages of life. If one
+appears wise 'tis but because his folly is proportioned
+to his age and fortune.
+
+208.--There are foolish people who know and who
+skilfully use their folly.
+
+209.--Who lives without folly is not so wise as he
+thinks.
+
+210.--In growing old we become more foolish--and
+more wise.
+
+211.--There are people who are like farces, which
+are praised but for a time (however foolish and dis-
+tasteful they may be).
+
+[The last clause is added from Edition of 1665.]
+
+212.--Most people judge men only by success or by
+fortune.
+
+213.--Love of glory, fear of shame, greed of fortune,
+the desire to make life agreeable and comfortable, and
+the wish to depreciate others are often causes of that
+bravery so vaunted among men.
+
+[Junius said of the Marquis of Granby, “He was as
+brave as a total absence of all feeling and reflection could
+make him.”--21st Jan. 1769.]
+
+214.--Valour in common soldiers is a perilous
+method of earning their living.
+
+[“Men venture necks to gain a fortune,
+ The soldier does it ev{'}ry day,
+ (Eight to the week) for sixpence pay.”
+ {--Samuel Butler,} HUDIBRAS, Part II., canto i., line 512.]
+
+215.--Perfect bravery and sheer cowardice are two
+extremes rarely found. The space between them is
+vast, and embraces all other sorts of courage. The
+difference between them is not less than between faces
+and tempers. Men will freely expose themselves at
+the beginning of an action, and relax and be easily
+discouraged if it should last. Some are content to
+satisfy worldly honour, and beyond that will do little
+else. Some are not always equally masters of their
+timidity. Others allow themselves to be overcome
+by panic; others charge because they dare not remain
+at their posts. Some may be found whose courage is
+strengthened by small perils, which prepare them to
+face greater dangers. Some will dare a sword cut and
+flinch from a bullet; others dread bullets little and fear
+to fight with swords. These varied kinds of courage
+agree in this, that night, by increasing fear and conceal-
+ing gallant or cowardly actions, allows men to spare
+themselves. There is even a more general discretion
+to be observed, for we meet with no man who does all
+he would have done if he were assured of getting off
+scot-free; so that it is certain that the fear of death
+does somewhat subtract from valour.
+
+[See also “Table Talk of Napoleon,” who agrees with
+this, so far as to say that few, but himself, had a two
+o'clock of the morning valour.]
+
+216.--Perfect valour is to do without witnesses what
+one would do before all the world.
+
+[“It is said of untrue valours that some men's valours are
+in the eyes of them that look on.”--Bacon, ADVANCEMENT
+OF LEARNING{, (1605), Book I, Section II, paragraph 5}.]
+
+217.--Intrepidity is an extraordinary strength of
+soul which raises it above the troubles, disorders, and
+emotions which the sight of great perils can arouse in
+it: by this strength heroes maintain a calm aspect and
+preserve their reason and liberty in the most sur-
+prising and terrible accidents.
+
+218.--Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue.
+
+[So Massillon, in one of his sermons, “Vice pays homage
+to virtue in doing honour to her appearance.”
+
+So Junius, writing to the Duke of Grafton, says, “You
+have done as much mischief to the community as Machia-
+vel, if Machiavel had not known that an appearance of
+morals and religion are useful in society.”--28 Sept. 1771.]
+
+219.--Most men expose themselves in battle enough
+to save their honor, few wish to do so more than
+sufficiently, or than is necessary to make the design
+for which they expose themselves succeed.
+
+220.--Vanity, shame, and above all disposition, often
+make men brave and women chaste.
+
+[“Vanity bids all her sons be brave and all her daughters
+chaste and courteous. But why do we need her instruc-
+tion?”--Sterne, SERMONS.]
+
+221.--We do not wish to lose life; we do wish to
+gain glory, and this makes brave men show more tact
+and address in avoiding death, than rogues show in
+preserving their fortunes.
+
+222.--Few persons on the first approach of age do
+not show wherein their body, or their mind, is begin-
+ning to fail.
+
+223.--Gratitude is as the good faith of merchants:
+it holds commerce together; and we do not pay be-
+cause it is just to pay debts, but because we shall
+thereby more easily find people who will lend.
+
+224.--All those who pay the debts of gratitude can-
+not thereby flatter themselves that they are grateful.
+
+225.--What makes false reckoning, as regards gra-
+titude, is that the pride of the giver and the receiver
+cannot agree as to the value of the benefit.
+
+[“The first foundation of friendship is not the power of
+conferring benefits, but the equality with which they are
+received, and may be returned.”--Junius's LETTER TO THE
+KING.]
+
+226.--Too great a hurry to discharge of an obliga-
+tion is a kind of ingratitude.
+
+227.--Lucky people are bad hands at correcting
+their faults; they always believe that they are right
+when fortune backs up their vice or folly.
+
+[“The power of fortune is confessed only by the misera-
+ble, for the happy impute all their success to prudence and
+merit.”--Swift, THOUGHTS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS]
+
+228.--Pride will not owe, self-love will not pay.
+
+229.--The good we have received from a man should
+make us excuse the wrong he does us.
+
+230.--Nothing is so infectious as example, and we
+never do great good or evil without producing the like.
+We imitate good actions by emulation, and bad ones
+by the evil of our nature, which shame imprisons
+until example liberates.
+
+231.--It is great folly to wish only to be wise.
+
+232.--Whatever pretext we give to our afflictions it
+is always interest or vanity that causes them.
+
+233.--In afflictions there are various kinds of hypo-
+crisy. In one, under the pretext of weeping for one
+dear to us we bemoan ourselves; we regret her good
+opinion of us, we deplore the loss of our comfort, our
+pleasure, our consideration. Thus the dead have the
+credit of tears shed for the living. I affirm 'tis a kind
+of hypocrisy which in these afflictions deceives itself.
+There is another kind not so innocent because it im-
+poses on all the world, that is the grief of those who
+aspire to the glory of a noble and immortal sorrow.
+After Time, which absorbs all, has obliterated what
+sorrow they had, they still obstinately obtrude their
+tears, their sighs their groans, they wear a solemn face,
+and try to persuade others by all their acts, that their
+grief will end only with their life. This sad and
+distressing vanity is commonly found in ambitious
+women. As their sex closes to them all paths to glory,
+they strive to render themselves celebrated by show-
+ing an inconsolable affliction. There is yet another
+kind of tears arising from but small sources, which
+flow easily and cease as easily. One weeps to achieve
+a reputation for tenderness, weeps to be pitied, weeps
+to be bewept, in fact one weeps to avoid the disgrace
+of not weeping!
+
+[“In grief the {PLEASURE} is still uppermost{;} and the afflic-
+tion we suffer has no resemblance to absolute pain which
+is always odious, and which we endeavour to shake off as
+soon as possible.”--Burke, SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL{, (1756),
+Part I, Sect. V}.]
+
+234.--It is more often from pride than from igno-
+rance that we are so obstinately opposed to current
+opinions; we find the first places taken, and we do
+not want to be the last.
+
+235.--We are easily consoled at the misfortunes of
+our friends when they enable us to prove our tender-
+ness for them.
+
+236.--It would seem that even self-love may be the
+dupe of goodness and forget itself when we work for
+others. And yet it is but taking the shortest way to
+arrive at its aim, taking usury under the pretext of
+giving, in fact winning everybody in a subtle and de-
+licate manner.
+
+237.--No one should be praised for his goodness if
+he has not strength enough to be wicked. All other
+goodness is but too often an idleness or powerlessness
+of will.
+
+238.--It is not so dangerous to do wrong to most
+men, as to do them too much good.
+
+239.--Nothing flatters our pride so much as the
+confidence of the great, because we regard it as the
+result of our worth, without remembering that gene-
+rally 'tis but vanity, or the inability to keep a secret.
+
+240.--We may say of conformity as distinguished
+from beauty, that it is a symmetry which knows no
+rules, and a secret harmony of features both one with
+each other and with the colour and appearance of the
+person.
+
+241.--Flirtation is at the bottom of woman's nature,
+although all do not practise it, some being restrained
+by fear, others by sense.
+
+[“By nature woman is a flirt, but her flirting changes
+both in the mode and object according to her opinions.”--
+Rousseau, EMILE.]
+
+242.--We often bore others when we think we
+cannot possibly bore them.
+
+243.--Few things are impossible in themselves;
+application to make them succeed fails us more often
+than the means.
+
+244.--Sovereign ability consists in knowing the
+value of things.
+
+245.--There is great ability in knowing how to con-
+ceal one's ability.
+
+[“You have accomplished a great stroke in diplomacy
+when you have made others think that you have only very
+average abilities.”--LA BRUYÈRE.]
+
+246.--What seems generosity is often disguised am-
+bition, that despises small to run after greater inte-
+rest.
+
+247.--The fidelity of most men is merely an inven-
+tion of self-love to win confidence; a method to place
+us above others and to render us depositaries of the
+most important matters.
+
+248.--Magnanimity despises all, to win all.
+
+249.--There is no less eloquence in the voice, in the
+eyes and in the air of a speaker than in his choice of
+words.
+
+250.--True eloquence consists in saying all that
+should be, not all that could be said.
+
+251.--There are people whose faults become them,
+others whose very virtues disgrace them.
+
+[“There are faults which do him honour, and virtues
+that disgrace him.”--Junius, LETTER OF 28TH MAY, 1770.]
+
+252.--It is as common to change one's tastes, as it
+is uncommon to change one's inclinations.
+
+253.--Interest sets at work all sorts of virtues and
+vices.
+
+254.--Humility is often a feigned submission which
+we employ to supplant others. It is one of the de-
+vices of Pride to lower us to raise us; and truly pride
+transforms itself in a thousand ways, and is never so
+well disguised and more able to deceive than when it
+hides itself under the form of humility.
+
+[“Grave and plausible enough to be thought fit for busi-
+ness.”--Junius, LETTER TO THE DUKE OF GRAFTON.
+
+“He saw a cottage with a double coach-house,
+ A cottage of gentility,
+ And the devil was pleased, for his darling sin
+ Is the pride that apes humility.”
+ Southey, DEVIL'S WALK.]
+
+{There are numerous corrections necessary for this
+quotation; I will keep the original above so you can
+compare the correct passages:
+
+“He passed a cottage with a double coach-house,
+ A cottage of gentility,
+ And he owned with a grin,
+ That his favourite sin
+ Is pride that apes humility.”
+ --Southey, DEVIL'S WALK, Stanza 8.
+
+“And the devil did grin, for his darling sin
+ Is pride that apes humility.”
+ --Samuel Taylor Coleridge, THE DEVIL'S THOUGHTS}
+
+255.--All feelings have their peculiar tone of voice,
+gestures and looks, and this harmony, as it is good
+or bad, pleasant or unpleasant, makes people agreeable
+or disagreeable.
+
+256.--In all professions we affect a part and an ap-
+pearance to seem what we wish to be. Thus the world
+is merely composed of actors.
+
+[“All the world's a stage, and all the men and women
+merely players.”--Shakespeare, AS YOU LIKE IT{, Act II,
+Scene VII, Jaques}.
+
+“Life is no more than a dramatic scene, in which the
+hero should preserve his consistency to the last.”--Junius.]
+
+257.--Gravity is a mysterious carriage of the body
+invented to conceal the want of mind.
+
+[“Gravity is the very essence of imposture.”--Shaftes-
+bury, CHARACTERISTICS, p. 11, vol. I. “The very essence of
+gravity is design, and consequently deceit; a taught trick
+to gain credit with the world for more sense and know-
+ledge than a man was worth, and that with all its preten-
+sions it was no better, but often worse, than what a French
+wit had long ago defined it--a mysterious carriage of the
+body to cover the defects of the mind.”--Sterne, TRISTRAM
+SHANDY, vol. I., chap. ii.]
+
+258.--Good taste arises more from judgment than
+wit.
+
+259.--The pleasure of love is in loving, we are hap-
+pier in the passion we feel than in that we inspire.
+
+260.--Civility is but a desire to receive civility, and
+to be esteemed polite.
+
+261.--The usual education of young people is to in-
+spire them with a second self-love.
+
+262.--There is no passion wherein self-love reigns
+so powerfully as in love, and one is always more ready
+to sacrifice the peace of the loved one than his own.
+
+263.--What we call liberality is often but the vanity
+of giving, which we like more than that we give away.
+
+264.--Pity is often a reflection of our own evils in
+the ills of others. It is a delicate foresight of the
+troubles into which we may fall. We help others
+that on like occasions we may be helped ourselves,
+and these services which we render, are in reality
+benefits we confer on ourselves by anticipation.
+
+[“GRIEF for the calamity of another is pity, and ariseth
+from the imagination that a like calamity may befal him-
+self{;} and therefore is called compassion.”--HOBBES' LEVIA-
+THAN{, (1651), Part I, Chapter VI}.]
+
+265.--A narrow mind begets obstinacy, and we do
+not easily believe what we cannot see.
+
+[“Stiff in opinion, always in the wrong.”
+ Dryden, ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL{, line 547}.]
+
+266.--We deceive ourselves if we believe that there
+are violent passions like ambition and love that can
+triumph over others. Idleness, languishing as she is,
+does not often fail in being mistress; she usurps
+authority over all the plans and actions of life; im-
+perceptibly consuming and destroying both passions
+and virtues.
+
+267.--A quickness in believing evil without having
+sufficiently examined it, is the effect of pride and
+laziness. We wish to find the guilty, and we do not
+wish to trouble ourselves in examining the crime.
+
+268.--We credit judges with the meanest motives,
+and yet we desire our reputation and fame should
+depend upon the judgment of men, who are all, either
+from their jealousy or pre-occupation or want of in-
+telligence, opposed to us--and yet 'tis only to make
+these men decide in our favour that we peril in so
+many ways both our peace and our life.
+
+269.--No man is clever enough to know all the evil
+he does.
+
+270.--One honour won is a surety for more.
+
+271.--Youth is a continual intoxication; it is the
+fever of reason.
+
+[“The best of life is but intoxication.”--{Lord Byron, }
+Don Juan{, Canto II, stanza 179}.
+In the 1st Edition, 1665, the maxim finishes with--“it is
+the fever of health, the folly of reason.”]
+
+272.--Nothing should so humiliate men who have
+deserved great praise, as the care they have taken
+to acquire it by the smallest means.
+
+273.--There are persons of whom the world approves
+who have no merit beyond the vices they use in the
+affairs of life.
+
+274.--The beauty of novelty is to love as the flower
+to the fruit; it lends a lustre which is easily lost,
+but which never returns.
+
+275.--Natural goodness, which boasts of being so
+apparent, is often smothered by the least interest.
+
+276.--Absence extinguishes small passions and in-
+creases great ones, as the wind will blow out a candle,
+and blow in a fire.
+
+277.--Women often think they love when they do
+not love. The business of a love affair, the emotion of
+mind that sentiment induces, the natural bias towards
+the pleasure of being loved, the difficulty of refusing,
+persuades them that they have real passion when they
+have but flirtation.
+
+[“And if in fact she takes a {“}GRANDE PASSION{”},
+ It is a very serious thing indeed:
+ Nine times in ten 'tis but caprice or fashion,
+ Coquetry, or a wish to take the lead,
+ The pride of a mere child with a new sash on.
+ Or wish to make a rival's bosom bleed:
+ But the {TENTH} instance will be a tornado,
+ For there's no saying what they will or may do.”
+ {--Lord Byron, }DON JUAN, canto xii. stanza 77.]
+
+278.--What makes us so often discontented with
+those who transact business for us is that they almost
+always abandon the interest of their friends for the
+interest of the business, because they wish to have
+the honour of succeeding in that which they have
+undertaken.
+
+279.--When we exaggerate the tenderness of our
+friends towards us, it is often less from gratitude
+than from a desire to exhibit our own merit.
+
+280.--The praise we give to new comers into the
+world arises from the envy we bear to those who are
+established.
+
+281.--Pride, which inspires, often serves to mode-
+rate envy.
+
+282.--Some disguised lies so resemble truth, that
+we should judge badly were we not deceived.
+
+283.--Sometimes there is not less ability in knowing
+how to use than in giving good advice.
+
+284.--There are wicked people who would be much
+less dangerous if they were wholly without goodness.
+
+285.--Magnanimity is sufficiently defined by its
+name, nevertheless one can say it is the good sense
+of pride, the most noble way of receiving praise.
+
+286.--It is impossible to love a second time those
+whom we have really ceased to love.
+
+287.--Fertility of mind does not furnish us with so
+many resources on the same matter, as the lack of
+intelligence makes us hesitate at each thing our ima-
+gination presents, and hinders us from at first discern-
+ing which is the best.
+
+288.--There are matters and maladies which at
+certain times remedies only serve to make worse;
+true skill consists in knowing when it is dangerous to
+use them.
+
+289.--Affected simplicity is refined imposture.
+
+[Domitianus simplicitatis ac modestiae imagine studium
+litterarum et amorem carminum simulabat quo velaret
+animum et fratris aemulationi subduceretur.--Tacitus,
+ANN. iv.]
+
+290.--There are as many errors of temper as of
+mind.
+
+291.--Man's merit, like the crops, has its season.
+
+292.--One may say of temper as of many buildings;
+it has divers aspects, some agreeable, others dis-
+agreeable.
+
+293.--Moderation cannot claim the merit of op-
+posing and overcoming Ambition: they are never
+found together. Moderation is the languor and sloth
+of the soul, Ambition its activity and heat.
+
+294.--We always like those who admire us, we do
+not always like those whom we admire.
+
+295.--It is well that we know not all our wishes.
+
+296.--It is difficult to love those we do not esteem,
+but it is no less so to love those whom we esteem much
+more than ourselves.
+
+297.--Bodily temperaments have a common course
+and rule which imperceptibly affect our will. They
+advance in combination, and successively exercise a
+secret empire over us, so that, without our perceiving
+it, they become a great part of all our actions.
+
+298.--The gratitude of most men is but a secret
+desire of receiving greater benefits.
+
+[Hence the common proverb “Gratitude is merely a
+lively sense of favors to come.”]
+
+299.--Almost all the world takes pleasure in paying
+small debts; many people show gratitude for trifling,
+but there is hardly one who does not show ingrati-
+tude for great favours.
+
+300.--There are follies as catching as infections.
+
+301.--Many people despise, but few know how to
+bestow wealth.
+
+302.--Only in things of small value we usually are
+bold enough not to trust to appearances.
+
+303.--Whatever good quality may be imputed to
+us, we ourselves find nothing new in it.
+
+304.--We may forgive those who bore us, we cannot
+forgive those whom we bore.
+
+305.--Interest which is accused of all our misdeeds
+often should be praised for our good deeds.
+
+306.--We find very few ungrateful people when we
+are able to confer favours.
+
+307.--It is as proper to be boastful alone as it is
+ridiculous to be so in company.
+
+308.--Moderation is made a virtue to limit the am-
+bition of the great; to console ordinary people for
+their small fortune and equally small ability.
+
+309.--There are persons fated to be fools, who com-
+mit follies not only by choice, but who are forced by
+fortune to do so.
+
+310.--Sometimes there are accidents in our life the
+skilful extrication from which demands a little folly.
+
+311.--If there be men whose folly has never ap-
+peared, it is because it has never been closely looked
+for.
+
+312.--Lovers are never tired of each other,--they
+always speak of themselves.
+
+313.--How is it that our memory is good enough to
+retain the least triviality that happens to us, and yet
+not good enough to recollect how often we have told
+it to the same person?
+
+[“Old men who yet retain the memory of things past,
+and forget how often they have told them, are most tedious
+companions.”--Montaigne, {ESSAYS, Book I, Chapter IX}.]
+
+314.--The extreme delight we take in talking of
+ourselves should warn us that it is not shared by those
+who listen.
+
+315.--What commonly hinders us from showing the
+recesses of our heart to our friends, is not the dis-
+trust we have of them, but that we have of our-
+selves.
+
+316.--Weak persons cannot be sincere.
+
+317.--'Tis a small misfortune to oblige an ungrate-
+ful man; but it is unbearable to be obliged by a
+scoundrel.
+
+318.--We may find means to cure a fool of his folly,
+but there are none to set straight a cross-grained
+spirit.
+
+319.--If we take the liberty to dwell on their faults
+we cannot long preserve the feelings we should hold
+towards our friends and benefactors.
+
+320.--To praise princes for virtues they do not pos-
+sess is but to reproach them with impunity.
+
+[“Praise undeserved is satire in disguise,” quoted by
+Pope from a poem which has not survived, “The Garland,”
+by Mr. Broadhurst. “In some cases exaggerated or
+inappropriate praise becomes the most severe satire.”--
+Scott, WOODSTOCK.]
+
+321.--We are nearer loving those who hate us, than
+those who love us more than we desire.
+
+322.--Those only are despicable who fear to be
+despised.
+
+323.--Our wisdom is no less at the mercy of Fortune
+than our goods.
+
+324.--There is more self-love than love in jealousy.
+
+325.--We often comfort ourselves by the weakness
+of evils, for which reason has not the strength to con-
+sole us.
+
+326.--Ridicule dishonours more than dishonour
+itself.
+
+[“No,” says a commentator, “Ridicule may do harm,
+but it cannot dishonour; it is vice which confers dis-
+honour.”]
+
+327.--We own to small faults to persuade others
+that we have not great ones.
+
+328.--Envy is more irreconcilable than hatred.
+
+329.--We believe, sometimes, that we hate flattery
+--we only dislike the method.
+
+[“{But} when I tell him he hates flatter{ers},
+ He says he does, being then most flattered.”
+ Shakespeare, JULIUS CAESAR{, Act II, Scene I, Decius}.]
+
+330.--We pardon in the degree that we love.
+
+331.--It is more difficult to be faithful to a mistress
+when one is happy, than when we are ill-treated by
+her.
+
+[Si qua volet regnare diu contemnat amantem.--Ovid,
+AMORES, ii. 19.]
+
+332.--Women do not know all their powers of
+flirtation.
+
+333.--Women cannot be completely severe unless
+they hate.
+
+334.--Women can less easily resign flirtations than
+love.
+
+335.--In love deceit almost always goes further
+than mistrust.
+
+336.--There is a kind of love, the excess of which
+forbids jealousy.
+
+337.--There are certain good qualities as there are
+senses, and those who want them can neither per-
+ceive nor understand them.
+
+338.--When our hatred is too bitter it places us
+below those whom we hate.
+
+339.--We only appreciate our good or evil in pro-
+portion to our self-love.
+
+340.--The wit of most women rather strengthens
+their folly than their reason.
+
+[“Women have an entertaining tattle, and sometimes wit,
+but for solid reasoning and good sense I never knew one in
+my life that had it, and who reasoned and acted conse-
+quentially for four and twenty hours together.”--Lord
+Chesterfield, LETTER 129.]
+
+341.--The heat of youth is not more opposed to
+safety than the coldness of age.
+
+342.--The accent of our native country dwells in
+the heart and mind as well as on the tongue.
+
+343.--To be a great man one should know how to
+profit by every phase of fortune.
+
+344.--Most men, like plants, possess hidden quali-
+ties which chance discovers.
+
+345.--Opportunity makes us known to others, but
+more to ourselves.
+
+346.--If a woman's temper is beyond control there
+can be no control of the mind or heart.
+
+347.--We hardly find any persons of good sense, save
+those who agree with us.
+
+[“That was excellently observed, say I, when I read
+an author when his opinion agrees with mine.”--Swift,
+THOUGHTS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS.]
+
+348.--When one loves one doubts even what one
+most believes.
+
+349.--The greatest miracle of love is to eradicate
+flirtation.
+
+350.--Why we hate with so much bitterness those
+who deceive us is because they think themselves more
+clever than we are.
+
+[“I could pardon all his (Louis XI.'s) deceit, but I can-
+not forgive his supposing me capable of the gross folly
+of being duped by his professions.”--Sir Walter Scott,
+QUENTIN DURWARD.]
+
+351.--We have much trouble to break with one,
+when we no longer are in love.
+
+352.--We almost always are bored with persons with
+whom we should not be bored.
+
+353.--A gentleman may love like a lunatic, but not
+like a beast.
+
+354.--There are certain defects which well mounted
+glitter like virtue itself.
+
+355.--Sometimes we lose friends for whose loss our
+regret is greater than our grief, and others for whom
+our grief is greater than our regret.
+
+356.--Usually we only praise heartily those who
+admire us.
+
+357.--Little minds are too much wounded by little
+things; great minds see all and are not even hurt.
+
+358.--Humility is the true proof of Christian
+virtues; without it we retain all our faults, and they
+are only covered by pride to hide them from others,
+and often from ourselves.
+
+359.--Infidelities should extinguish love, and we
+ought not to be jealous when we have cause to be so.
+No persons escape causing jealousy who are worthy of
+exciting it.
+
+360.--We are more humiliated by the least infidelity
+towards us, than by our greatest towards others.
+
+361.--Jealousy is always born with love, but does
+not always die with it.
+
+362.--Most women do not grieve so much for the
+death of their lovers for love's-sake, as to show they
+were worthy of being beloved.
+
+363.--The evils we do to others give us less pain
+than those we do to ourselves.
+
+364.--We well know that it is bad taste to talk of
+our wives; but we do not so well know that it is the
+same to speak of ourselves.
+
+365.--There are virtues which degenerate into vices
+when they arise from Nature, and others which when
+acquired are never perfect. For example, reason
+must teach us to manage our estate and our con-
+fidence, while Nature should have given us goodness
+and valour.
+
+366.--However we distrust the sincerity of those
+whom we talk with, we always believe them more sin-
+cere with us than with others.
+
+367.--There are few virtuous women who are not
+tired of their part.
+
+[“Every woman is at heart a rake.”-–Pope. MORAL
+ESSAYS, ii.]
+
+368.--The greater number of good women are like
+concealed treasures, safe as no one has searched for
+them.
+
+369.--The violences we put upon ourselves to escape
+love are often more cruel than the cruelty of those
+we love.
+
+370.--There are not many cowards who know the
+whole of their fear.
+
+371.--It is generally the fault of the loved one not
+to perceive when love ceases.
+
+372.--Most young people think they are natural
+when they are only boorish and rude.
+
+373.--Some tears after having deceived others de-
+ceive ourselves.
+
+374.--If we think we love a woman for love of
+herself we are greatly deceived.
+
+375.--Ordinary men commonly condemn what is
+beyond them.
+
+376.--Envy is destroyed by true friendship, flirta-
+tion by true love.
+
+377.--The greatest mistake of penetration is not to
+have fallen short, but to have gone too far.
+
+378.--We may bestow advice, but we cannot inspire
+the conduct.
+
+379.--As our merit declines so also does our taste.
+
+380.--Fortune makes visible our virtues or our
+vices, as light does objects.
+
+381.--The struggle we undergo to remain faithful
+to one we love is little better than infidelity.
+
+382.--Our actions are like the rhymed ends of
+blank verses (BOUTS-RIMÉS) where to each one puts
+what construction he pleases.
+
+[The BOUTS-RIMÉS was a literary game popular in the 17th
+and 18th centuries--the rhymed words at the end of a line
+being given for others to fill up. Thus Horace Walpole
+being given, “brook, why, crook, I,” returned the bur-
+lesque verse--
+ “I sits with my toes in a BROOK,
+ And if any one axes me WHY?
+ I gies 'em a rap with my CROOK,
+ 'Tis constancy makes me, ses I.”]
+
+383.--The desire of talking about ourselves, and of
+putting our faults in the light we wish them to be
+seen, forms a great part of our sincerity.
+
+384.--We should only be astonished at still being
+able to be astonished.
+
+385.--It is equally as difficult to be contented when
+one has too much or too little love.
+
+386.--No people are more often wrong than those
+who will not allow themselves to be wrong.
+
+387.--A fool has not stuff in him to be good.
+
+388.--If vanity does not overthrow all virtues, at
+least she makes them totter.
+
+389.--What makes the vanity of others unsupport-
+able is that it wounds our own.
+
+390.--We give up more easily our interest than our
+taste.
+
+391.--Fortune appears so blind to none as to those
+to whom she has done no good.
+
+392.--We should manage fortune like our health,
+enjoy it when it is good, be patient when it is bad,
+and never resort to strong remedies but in an extremity.
+
+393.--Awkwardness sometimes disappears in the
+camp, never in the court.
+
+394.--A man is often more clever than one other, but
+not than all others.
+
+[“Singuli decipere ac decipi possunt, nemo omnes,
+omnes neminem fefellerunt.”--Pliny{ the Younger,
+PANEGYRICUS, LXII}.]
+
+395.--We are often less unhappy at being deceived
+by one we loved, than on being deceived.
+
+396.--We keep our first lover for a long time--if we
+do not get a second.
+
+397.--We have not the courage to say generally
+that we have no faults, and that our enemies have
+no good qualities; but in fact we are not far from be-
+lieving so.
+
+398.--Of all our faults that which we most readily
+admit is idleness: we believe that it makes all virtues
+ineffectual, and that without utterly destroying, it at
+least suspends their operation.
+
+399.--There is a kind of greatness which does not
+depend upon fortune: it is a certain manner what
+distinguishes us, and which seems to destine us for
+great things; it is the value we insensibly set upon
+ourselves; it is by this quality that we gain the
+deference of other men, and it is this which com-
+monly raises us more above them, than birth, rank,
+or even merit itself.
+
+400.--There may be talent without position, but
+there is no position without some kind of talent.
+
+401.--Rank is to merit what dress is to a pretty
+woman.
+
+402.--What we find the least of in flirtation is love.
+
+403.--Fortune sometimes uses our faults to exalt us,
+and there are tiresome people whose deserts would be
+ill rewarded if we did not desire to purchase their
+absence.
+
+404.--It appears that nature has hid at the bottom
+of our hearts talents and abilities unknown to us. It
+is only the passions that have the power of bringing
+them to light, and sometimes give us views more
+true and more perfect than art could possibly do.
+
+405.--We reach quite inexperienced the different
+stages of life, and often, in spite of the number of our
+years, we lack experience.
+
+[“To most men experience is like the stern lights of a
+ship which illumine only the track it has passed.”--
+Coleridge.]
+
+406.--Flirts make it a point of honour to be jealous
+of their lovers, to conceal their envy of other women.
+
+407.--It may well be that those who have trapped
+us by their tricks do not seem to us so foolish as we
+seem to ourselves when trapped by the tricks of
+others.
+
+408.--The most dangerous folly of old persons who
+have been loveable is to forget that they are no
+longer so.
+
+[“Every woman who is not absolutely ugly thinks herself
+handsome. The suspicion of age no woman, let her be
+ever so old, forgives.”--Lord Chesterfield, LETTER 129.]
+
+409.--We should often be ashamed of our very best
+actions if the world only saw the motives which caused
+them.
+
+410.--The greatest effort of friendship is not to show
+our faults to a friend, but to show him his own.
+
+4ll.--We have few faults which are not far more
+excusable than the means we adopt to hide them.
+
+412.--Whatever disgrace we may have deserved, it
+is almost always in our power to re-establish our cha-
+racter.
+
+[“This is hardly a period at which the most irregular
+character may not be redeemed. The mistakes of one sin
+find a retreat in patriotism, those of the other in devotion.”
+-Junius, LETTER TO THE KING.]
+
+413.--A man cannot please long who has only one
+kind of wit.
+
+[According to Segrais this maxim was a hit at Racine
+and Boileau, who, despising ordinary conversation, talked
+incessantly of literature; but there is some doubt as to
+Segrais' statement.--Aimé Martin.]
+
+414.--Idiots and lunatics see only their own wit.
+
+415.--Wit sometimes enables us to act rudely with
+impunity.
+
+416.--The vivacity which increases in old age is not
+far removed from folly.
+
+[“How ill {white} hairs become {a} fool and jester.”--
+Shakespeare{, King Henry IV, Part II, Act. V, Scene V,
+King}.
+
+“Can age itself forget that you are now in the last act of
+life? Can grey hairs make folly venerable, and is there
+no period to be reserved for meditation or retirement.”--
+Junius, TO THE DUKE OF BEDFORD, 19th Sept. 1769.]
+
+417.--In love the quickest is always the best cure.
+
+418.--Young women who do not want to appear
+flirts, and old men who do not want to appear ridi-
+culous, should not talk of love as a matter wherein
+they can have any interest.
+
+419.--We may seem great in a post beneath our
+capacity, but we oftener seem little in a post above it.
+
+420.--We often believe we have constancy in mis-
+fortune when we have nothing but debasement, and
+we suffer misfortunes without regarding them as
+cowards who let themselves be killed from fear of
+defending themselves.
+
+421.--Conceit causes more conversation than wit.
+
+422.--All passions make us commit some faults,
+love alone makes us ridiculous.
+
+[“In love we all are fools alike.”--Gay{, THE
+BEGGAR'S OPERA, (1728), Act III, Scene I, Lucy}.]
+
+423.--Few know how to be old.
+
+424.--We often credit ourselves with vices the
+reverse of what we have, thus when weak we boast of
+our obstinacy.
+
+425.--Penetration has a spice of divination in it
+which tickles our vanity more than any other quality
+of the mind.
+
+426.--The charm of novelty and old custom, how-
+ever opposite to each other, equally blind us to the
+faults of our friends.
+
+[“Two things the most opposite blind us equally, custom
+and novelty.”-La Bruyère, DES JUDGEMENTS.]
+
+427.--Most friends sicken us of friendship, most
+devotees of devotion.
+
+428.--We easily forgive in our friends those faults
+we do not perceive.
+
+429.--Women who love, pardon more readily great
+indiscretions than little infidelities.
+
+430.--In the old age of love as in life we still sur-
+vive for the evils, though no longer for the pleasures.
+
+[“The youth of friendship is better than its old age.”--
+Hazlitt's CHARACTERISTICS, 229.]
+
+431.--Nothing prevents our being unaffected so
+much as our desire to seem so.
+
+432.--To praise good actions heartily is in some
+measure to take part in them.
+
+433.--The most certain sign of being born with
+great qualities is to be born without envy.
+
+[“Nemo alienae virtuti invidet qui satis confidet suae.”
+-Cicero IN MARC ANT.]
+
+434.--When our friends have deceived us we owe
+them but indifference to the tokens of their friend-
+ship, yet for their misfortunes we always owe them
+pity.
+
+435.--Luck and temper rule the world.
+
+436.--It is far easier to know men than to know
+man.
+
+437.--We should not judge of a man's merit by his
+great abilities, but by the use he makes of them.
+
+438.--There is a certain lively gratitude which not
+only releases us from benefits received, but which also,
+by making a return to our friends as payment, renders
+them indebted to us.
+
+[“And understood not that a grateful mind,
+ By owing owes not, but is at once
+ Indebted and discharged.”
+ Milton. PARADISE LOST.]
+
+439.--We should earnestly desire but few things if
+we clearly knew what we desired.
+
+440.--The cause why the majority of women are so
+little given to friendship is, that it is insipid after
+having felt love.
+
+[“Those who have experienced a great passion neglect
+friendship, and those who have united themselves to friend-
+ship have nought to do with love.”--La Bruyère. DU COEUR.]
+
+441.--As in friendship so in love, we are often hap-
+pier from ignorance than from knowledge.
+
+442.--We try to make a virtue of vices we are loth
+to correct.
+
+443.--The most violent passions give some respite,
+but vanity always disturbs us.
+
+444.--Old fools are more foolish than young fools.
+
+[“MALVOLIO. Infirmity{,} that decays the wise{,} doth eve{r}
+make the better fool.
+ CLOWN. God send you, sir, a speedy infirmity{,} for the
+better increasing of your folly.”--Shakespeare. TWELFTH
+NIGHT{, Act I, Scene V}.]
+
+445.--Weakness is more hostile to virtue than vice.
+
+446.--What makes the grief of shame and jealousy
+so acute is that vanity cannot aid us in enduring them.
+
+447.--Propriety is the least of all laws, but the most
+obeyed.
+
+[Honour has its supreme laws, to which education is
+bound to conform....Those things which honour
+forbids are more rigorously forbidden when the laws do
+not concur in the prohibition, and those it commands are
+more strongly insisted upon when they happen not to be
+commanded by law.--Montesquieu, {THE SPIRIT OF LAWS, }b. 4,
+c. ii.]
+
+448.--A well-trained mind has less difficulty in sub-
+mitting to than in guiding an ill-trained mind.
+
+449.--When fortune surprises us by giving us some
+great office without having gradually led us to expect
+it, or without having raised our hopes, it is well nigh
+impossible to occupy it well, and to appear worthy
+to fill it.
+
+450.--Our pride is often increased by what we
+retrench from our other faults.
+
+[“The loss of sensual pleasures was supplied and com-
+pensated by spiritual pride.”--Gibbon. DECLINE AND FALL,
+chap. xv.]
+
+451.--No fools so wearisome as those who have some
+wit.
+
+452.--No one believes that in every respect he is
+behind the man he considers the ablest in the world.
+
+453.--In great matters we should not try so much
+to create opportunities as to utilise those that offer
+themselves.
+
+[Yet Lord Bacon says “A wise man will make more
+opportunities than he finds.”--Essays, {(1625),
+“Of Ceremonies and Respects”}]
+
+454.--There are few occasions when we should make
+a bad bargain by giving up the good on condition that
+no ill was said of us.
+
+455.--However disposed the world may be to judge
+wrongly, it far oftener favours false merit than does
+justice to true.
+
+456.--Sometimes we meet a fool with wit, never one
+with discretion.
+
+457.--We should gain more by letting the world see
+what we are than by trying to seem what we are not.
+
+458.--Our enemies come nearer the truth in the
+opinions they form of us than we do in our opinion of
+ourselves.
+
+459.--There are many remedies to cure love, yet
+none are infallible.
+
+460.--It would be well for us if we knew all our
+passions make us do.
+
+461.--Age is a tyrant who forbids at the penalty of
+life all the pleasures of youth.
+
+462.--The same pride which makes us blame faults
+from which we believe ourselves free causes us to
+despise the good qualities we have not.
+
+463.--There is often more pride than goodness in
+our grief for our enemies' miseries; it is to show how
+superior we are to them, that we bestow on them the
+sign of our compassion.
+
+464.--There exists an excess of good and evil which
+surpasses our comprehension.
+
+465.--Innocence is most fortunate if it finds the
+same protection as crime.
+
+466.--Of all the violent passions the one that
+becomes a woman best is love.
+
+467.--Vanity makes us sin more against our taste
+than reason.
+
+468.--Some bad qualities form great talents.
+
+469.--We never desire earnestly what we desire in
+reason.
+
+470.--All our qualities are uncertain and doubtful,
+both the good as well as the bad, and nearly all are
+creatures of opportunities.
+
+471.--In their first passion women love their lovers,
+in all the others they love love.
+
+[“In her first passion woman loves her lover,
+ In all her others what she loves is love.”
+ {--Lord Byron, }Don Juan, Canto iii., stanza 3.
+“We truly love once, the first time; the subsequent pas-
+sions are more or less involuntary.” La Bruyère: DU COEUR.]
+
+472.--Pride as the other passions has its follies. We
+are ashamed to own we are jealous, and yet we plume
+ourselves in having been and being able to be so.
+
+473.--However rare true love is, true friendship is
+rarer.
+
+[“It is more common to see perfect love than real friend-
+ship.”--La Bruyère. DU COEUR.]
+
+474.--There are few women whose charm survives
+their beauty.
+
+475.--The desire to be pitied or to be admired often
+forms the greater part of our confidence.
+
+476.--Our envy always lasts longer than the happi-
+ness of those we envy.
+
+477.--The same firmness that enables us to resist
+love enables us to make our resistance durable and
+lasting. So weak persons who are always excited by
+passions are seldom really possessed of any.
+
+478.--Fancy does not enable us to invent so many
+different contradictions as there are by nature in every
+heart.
+
+479.--It is only people who possess firmness who
+can possess true gentleness. In those who appear
+gentle it is generally only weakness, which is readily
+converted into harshness.
+
+480.--Timidity is a fault which is dangerous to
+blame in those we desire to cure of it.
+
+481.--Nothing is rarer than true good nature, those
+who think they have it are generally only pliant or weak.
+
+482.--The mind attaches itself by idleness and habit
+to whatever is easy or pleasant. This habit always places
+bounds to our knowledge, and no one has ever yet
+taken the pains to enlarge and expand his mind to
+the full extent of its capacities.
+
+483.--Usually we are more satirical from vanity
+than malice.
+
+484.--When the heart is still disturbed by the relics
+of a passion it is proner to take up a new one than
+when wholly cured.
+
+485.--Those who have had great passions often find
+all their lives made miserable in being cured of them.
+
+486.--More persons exist without self-love than
+without envy.
+
+[“I do not believe that there is a human creature in his
+senses arrived at maturity, that at some time or other has
+not been carried away by this passion (envy) in good
+earnest, and yet I never met with any who dared own he
+was guilty of it, but in jest.”--Mandeville: FABLE OF THE
+BEES; Remark N.]
+
+487.--We have more idleness in the mind than in
+the body.
+
+488.--The calm or disturbance of our mind does
+not depend so much on what we regard as the more
+important things of life, as in a judicious or injudicious
+arrangement of the little things of daily occurrence.
+
+489.--However wicked men may be, they do not
+dare openly to appear the enemies of virtue, and when
+they desire to persecute her they either pretend to
+believe her false or attribute crimes to her.
+
+490.--We often go from love to ambition, but we
+never return from ambition to love.
+
+[“Men commence by love, finish by ambition, and do
+not find a quieter seat while they remain there.”--La
+Bruyère: DU COEUR.]
+
+491.--Extreme avarice is nearly always mistaken,
+there is no passion which is oftener further away from
+its mark, nor upon which the present has so much
+power to the prejudice of the future.
+
+492.--Avarice often produces opposite results: there
+are an infinite number of persons who sacrifice their
+property to doubtful and distant expectations, others
+mistake great future advantages for small present
+interests.
+
+[AIMÉ MARTIN says, “The author here confuses greedi-
+ness, the desire and avarice--passions which probably have
+a common origin, but produce different results. The
+greedy man is nearly always desirous to possess, and often
+foregoes great future advantages for small present interests.
+The avaricious man, on the other hand, mistakes present
+advantages for the great expectations of the future. Both
+desire to possess and enjoy. But the miser possesses and
+enjoys nothing but the pleasure of possessing; he risks
+nothing, gives nothing, hopes nothing, his life is centred
+in his strong box, beyond that he has no want.”]
+
+493.--It appears that men do not find they have
+enough faults, as they increase the number by certain
+peculiar qualities that they affect to assume, and
+which they cultivate with so great assiduity that at
+length they become natural faults, which they can no
+longer correct.
+
+494.--What makes us see that men know their
+faults better than we imagine, is that they are never
+wrong when they speak of their conduct; the same
+self-love that usually blinds them enlightens them,
+and gives them such true views as to make them
+suppress or disguise the smallest thing that might be
+censured.
+
+495.--Young men entering life should be either shy
+or bold; a solemn and sedate manner usually de-
+generates into impertinence.
+
+496.--Quarrels would not last long if the fault was
+only on one side.
+
+497.--It is valueless to a woman to be young unless
+pretty, or to be pretty unless young.
+
+498.--Some persons are so frivolous and fickle that
+they are as far removed from real defects as from
+substantial qualities.
+
+499.--We do not usually reckon a woman's first
+flirtation until she has had a second.
+
+500.--Some people are so self-occupied that when
+in love they find a mode by which to be engrossed
+with the passion without being so with the person
+they love.
+
+501.--Love, though so very agreeable, pleases more
+by its ways than by itself.
+
+502.--A little wit with good sense bores less in the
+long run than much wit with ill nature.
+
+503.--Jealousy is the worst of all evils, yet the one
+that is least pitied by those who cause it.
+
+504.--Thus having treated of the hollowness of so
+many apparent virtues, it is but just to say something
+on the hollowness of the contempt for death. I allude
+to that contempt of death which the heathen boasted
+they derived from their unaided understanding, with-
+out the hope of a future state. There is a difference
+between meeting death with courage and despising it.
+The first is common enough, the last I think always
+feigned. Yet everything that could be has been
+written to persuade us that death is no evil, and the
+weakest of men, equally with the bravest, have given
+many noble examples on which to found such an
+opinion, still I do not think that any man of good sense
+has ever yet believed in it. And the pains we take to
+persuade others as well as ourselves amply show that
+the task is far from easy. For many reasons we may
+be disgusted with life, but for none may we despise it.
+Not even those who commit suicide regard it as a
+light matter, and are as much alarmed and startled
+as the rest of the world if death meets them in a dif-
+ferent way than the one they have selected. The differ-
+ence we observe in the courage of so great a number of
+brave men, is from meeting death in a way different
+from what they imagined, when it shows itself nearer at
+one time than at another. Thus it ultimately happens
+that having despised death when they were ignorant
+of it, they dread it when they become acquainted with
+it. If we could avoid seeing it with all its surround-
+ings, we might perhaps believe that it was not the
+greatest of evils. The wisest and bravest are those
+who take the best means to avoid reflecting on it, as
+every man who sees it in its real light regards it as
+dreadful. The necessity of dying created all the con-
+stancy of philosophers. They thought it but right to
+go with a good grace when they could not avoid going,
+and being unable to prolong their lives indefinitely,
+nothing remained but to build an immortal reputation,
+and to save from the general wreck all that could be
+saved. To put a good face upon it, let it suffice, not
+to say all that we think to ourselves, but rely more
+on our nature than on our fallible reason, which might
+make us think we could approach death with indif-
+ference. The glory of dying with courage, the hope
+of being regretted, the desire to leave behind us a
+good reputation, the assurance of being enfranchised
+from the miseries of life and being no longer depend-
+ent on the wiles of fortune, are resources which
+should not be passed over. But we must not regard
+them as infallible. They should affect us in the same
+proportion as a single shelter affects those who in war
+storm a fortress. At a distance they think it may
+afford cover, but when near they find it only a feeble
+protection. It is only deceiving ourselves to imagine
+that death, when near, will seem the same as at
+a distance, or that our feelings, which are merely
+weaknesses, are naturally so strong that they will
+not suffer in an attack of the rudest of trials. It
+is equally as absurd to try the effect of self-esteem
+and to think it will enable us to count as naught
+what will of necessity destroy it. And the mind in
+which we trust to find so many resources will be far
+too weak in the struggle to persuade us in the way we
+wish. For it is this which betrays us so frequently,
+and which, instead of filling us with contempt of death,
+serves but to show us all that is frightful and fearful.
+The most it can do for us is to persuade us to avert
+our gaze and fix it on other objects. Cato and Brutus
+each selected noble ones. A lackey sometime ago
+contented himself by dancing on the scaffold when
+he was about to be broken on the wheel. So however
+diverse the motives they but realize the same result.
+For the rest it is a fact that whatever difference there
+may be between the peer and the peasant, we have
+constantly seen both the one and the other meet death
+with the same composure. Still there is always this
+difference, that the contempt the peer shows for death
+is but the love of fame which hides death from his
+sight; in the peasant it is but the result of his limited
+vision that hides from him the extent of the evil, end
+leaves him free to reflect on other things.
+
+
+
+THE FIRST SUPPLEMENT
+
+[The following reflections are extracted from the first two
+editions of La Rochefoucauld, having been suppressed
+by the author in succeeding issues.]
+
+
+I.--Self-love is the love OF self, and of all things
+FOR self. It makes men self-worshippers, and if for-
+tune permits them, causes them to tyrannize over
+others; it is never quiet when out of itself, and only
+rests upon other subjects as a bee upon flowers, to
+extract from them its proper food. Nothing is so
+headstrong as its desires, nothing so well concealed as
+its designs, nothing so skilful as its management; its
+suppleness is beyond description; its changes surpass
+those of the metamorphoses, its refinements those of
+chemistry. We can neither plumb the depths nor
+pierce the shades of its recesses. Therein it is hidden
+from the most far-seeing eyes, therein it takes a thou-
+sand imperceptible folds. There it is often to itself
+invisible; it there conceives, there nourishes and rears,
+without being aware of it, numberless loves and
+hatreds, some so monstrous that when they are brought
+to light it disowns them, and cannot resolve to avow
+them. In the night which covers it are born the
+ridiculous persuasions it has of itself, thence come its
+errors, its ignorance, its silly mistakes; thence it is
+led to believe that its passions which sleep are dead,
+and to think that it has lost all appetite for that of
+which it is sated. But this thick darkness which con-
+ceals it from itself does not hinder it from seeing that
+perfectly which is out of itself; and in this it re-
+sembles our eyes which behold all, and yet cannot set
+their own forms. In fact, in great concerns and im-
+portant matters when the violence of its desires sum-
+mons all its attention, it sees, feels, hears, imagines,
+suspects, penetrates, divines all: so that we might
+think that each of its passions had a magic power
+proper to it. Nothing is so close and strong as its
+attachments, which, in sight of the extreme misfor-
+tunes which threaten it, it vainly attempts to break.
+Yet sometimes it effects that without trouble and
+quickly, which it failed to do with its whole power
+and in the course of years, whence we may fairly con-
+clude that it is by itself that its desires are inflamed,
+rather than by the beauty and merit of its objects,
+that its own taste embellishes and heightens them;
+that it is itself the game it pursues, and that it follows
+eagerly when it runs after that upon which itself is
+eager. It is made up of contraries. It is imperious and
+obedient, sincere and false, piteous and cruel, timid
+and bold. It has different desires according to the
+diversity of temperaments, which turn and fix it some-
+times upon riches, sometimes on pleasures. It changes
+according to our age, our fortunes, and our hopes;
+it is quite indifferent whether it has many or one,
+because it can split itself into many portions, and
+unite in one as it pleases. It is inconstant, and besides
+the changes which arise from strange causes it has
+an infinity born of itself, and of its own substance.
+It is inconstant through inconstancy, of lightness,
+love, novelty, lassitude and distaste. It is capricious,
+and one sees it sometimes work with intense eager-
+ness and with incredible labour to obtain things of
+little use to it which are even hurtful, but which it
+pursues because it wishes for them. It is silly, and
+often throws its whole application on the utmost
+frivolities. It finds all its pleasure in the dullest
+matters, and places its pride in the most contemptible.
+It is seen in all states of life, and in all conditions; it
+lives everywhere and upon everything; it subsists on
+nothing; it accommodates itself either to things or to
+the want of them; it goes over to those who are at war
+with it, enters into their designs, and, this is wonderful,
+it, with them, hates even itself; it conspires for its own
+loss, it works towards its own ruin--in fact, caring only
+to exist, and providing that it may BE, it will be its own
+enemy! We must therefore not be surprised if it is
+sometimes united to the rudest austerity, and if it
+enters so boldly into partnership to destroy her,
+because when it is rooted out in one place it re-esta-
+blishes itself in another. When it fancies that it
+abandons its pleasure it merely changes or suspends
+its enjoyment. When even it is conquered in its full
+flight, we find that it triumphs in its own defeat.
+Here then is the picture of self-love whereof the whole
+of our life is but one long agitation. The sea is its
+living image; and in the flux and reflux of its con-
+tinuous waves there is a faithful expression of the
+stormy succession of its thoughts and of its eternal
+motion. (Edition of 1665, No. 1.)
+
+II.--Passions are only the different degrees of the
+heat or coldness of the blood. (1665, No. 13.)
+
+III.--Moderation in good fortune is but apprehen-
+sion of the shame which follows upon haughtiness, or
+a fear of losing what we have. (1665, No. 18.)
+
+IV.--Moderation is like temperance in eating; we
+could eat more but we fear to make ourselves ill.
+(1665, No. 21.)
+
+V.--Everybody finds that to abuse in another which
+he finds worthy of abuse in himself. (1665, No. 33.)
+
+VI.--Pride, as if tired of its artifices and its different
+metamorphoses, after having solely filled the divers
+parts of the comedy of life, exhibits itself with
+its natural face, and is discovered by haughtiness; so
+much so that we may truly say that haughtiness is but
+the flash and open declaration of pride. (1665, No. 37.)
+
+VII.--One kind of happiness is to know exactly at
+what point to be miserable. (1665, No. 53.)
+
+VIII.--When we do not find peace of mind (REPOS)
+in ourselves it is useless to seek it elsewhere. (1665,
+No. 53.)
+
+IX.--One should be able to answer for one's fortune,
+so as to be able to answer for what we shall do. (1665,
+No. 70.)
+
+X.--Love is to the soul of him who loves, what the
+soul is to the body which it animates. (1665, No. 77.)
+
+XI.--As one is never at liberty to love or to cease
+from loving, the lover cannot with justice complain
+of the inconstancy of his mistress, nor she of the
+fickleness of her lover. (1665, No. 81.)
+
+XII.--Justice in those judges who are moderate
+is but a love of their place. (1665, No. 89.)
+
+XIII.--When we are tired of loving we are quite
+content if our mistress should become faithless, to loose
+us from our fidelity. (1665, No. 85.)
+
+XIV.--The first impulse of joy which we feel at the
+happiness of our friends arises neither from our
+natural goodness nor from friendship; it is the result
+of self-love, which flatters us with being lucky in
+our own turn, or in reaping something from the good
+fortune of our friends. (1665, No. 97.)
+
+XV.--In the adversity of our best friends we
+always find something which is not wholly displeasing
+to us. (1665, No. 99.)
+
+[This gave occasion to Swift's celebrated “Verses on his
+own Death.” The four first are quoted opposite the title,
+then follow these lines:--
+ “This maxim more than all the rest,
+ Is thought too base for human breast;
+ In all distresses of our friends,
+ We first consult our private ends;
+ While nature kindly bent to ease us,
+ Points out some circumstance to please us.”
+
+See also Chesterfield's defence of this in his 129th letter;
+“they who know the deception and wickedness of the
+human heart will not be either romantic or blind enough to
+deny what Rochefoucauld and Swift have affirmed as a
+general truth.”]
+
+XVI.--How shall we hope that another person will
+keep our secret if we do not keep it ourselves. (1665,
+No. 100.)
+
+XVII.--As if it was not sufficient that self-love
+should have the power to change itself, it has added
+that of changing other objects, and this it does in a
+very astonishing manner; for not only does it so well
+disguise them that it is itself deceived, but it even
+changes the state and nature of things. Thus, when
+a female is adverse to us, and she turns her hate
+and persecution against us, self-love pronounces
+on her actions with all the severity of justice;
+it exaggerates the faults till they are enormous,
+and looks at her good qualities in so disadvan-
+tageous a light that they become more displeasing than
+her faults. If however the same female becomes
+favourable to us, or certain of our interests reconcile
+her to us, our sole self interest gives her back the
+lustre which our hatred deprived her of. The bad
+qualities become effaced, the good ones appear with
+a redoubled advantage; we even summon all our
+indulgence to justify the war she has made upon us.
+Now although all passions prove this truth, that of
+love exhibits it most clearly; for we may see a
+lover moved with rage by the neglect or the infidelity
+of her whom he loves, and meditating the utmost
+vengeance that his passion can inspire. Nevertheless
+as soon as the sight of his beloved has calmed the
+fury of his movements, his passion holds that beauty
+innocent; he only accuses himself, he condemns his
+condemnations, and by the miraculous power of self-
+love, he whitens the blackest actions of his mistress,
+and takes from her all crime to lay it on himself.
+
+{No date or number is given for this maxim}
+
+XVIII.--There are none who press so heavily on
+others as the lazy ones, when they have satisfied their
+idleness, and wish to appear industrious. (1666,
+No. 91.)
+
+XIX.--The blindness of men is the most dangerous
+effect of their pride; it seems to nourish and augment
+it, it deprives us of knowledge of remedies which can
+solace our miseries and can cure our faults. (1665,
+No. 102.)
+
+XX.--One has never less reason than when one
+despairs of finding it in others. (1665, No. 103.)
+
+XXI.--Philosophers, and Seneca above all, have not
+diminished crimes by their precepts; they have only
+used them in the building up of pride. (1665, No. 105.)
+
+XXII.--It is a proof of little friendship not to per-
+ceive the growing coolness of that of our friends.
+(1666, No. 97.)
+
+XXIII.--The most wise may be so in indifferent and
+ordinary matters, but they are seldom so in their
+most serious affairs. (1665, No. 132.)
+
+XXIV.--The most subtle folly grows out of the most
+subtle wisdom. (1665, No. 134.)
+
+XXV.--Sobriety is the love of health, or an in-
+capacity to eat much. (l665, No. 135.)
+
+XXVI.--We never forget things so well as when we
+are tired of talking of them. (1665, No. 144.)
+
+XXVII.--The praise bestowed upon us is at least
+useful in rooting us in the practice of virtue. (1665,
+No. 155.)
+
+XXVIII.--Self-love takes care to prevent him whom
+we flatter from being him who most flatters us. (1665,
+No. 157.)
+
+XXIX.--Men only blame vice and praise virtue
+from interest. (1665, No. 151.)
+
+XXX.--We make no difference in the kinds of anger,
+although there is that which is light and almost inno-
+cent, which arises from warmth of complexion, tem-
+perament, and another very criminal, which is, to
+speak properly, the fury of pride. (1665, No. 159.)
+
+XXXI.--Great souls are not those who have fewer
+passions and more virtues than the common, but
+those only who have greater designs. (1665, No. 161.)
+
+XXXII.--Kings do with men as with pieces of
+money; they make them bear what value they will,
+and one is forced to receive them according to their
+currency value, and not at their true worth. (1665,
+No. 165.)
+
+[See Burns{, FOR A' THAT AN A' THAT}--
+ “The rank is but the guinea's stamp,
+ {The} man's {the gowd} for a' that.”
+Also Farquhar and other parallel passages pointed out in
+FAMILIAR WORDS.]
+
+XXXIII.--Natural ferocity makes fewer people
+cruel than self-love. (1665, No. 174.)
+
+XXXIV.--One may say of all our virtues as an
+Italian poet says of the propriety of women, that it
+is often merely the art of appearing chaste. (1665,
+No. 176.)
+
+XXXV.--There are crimes which become innocent
+and even glorious by their brilliancy,* their number, or
+their excess; thus it happens that public robbery is
+called financial skill, and the unjust capture of pro-
+vinces is called a conquest. (1665, No. 192.)
+
+*<Some crimes may be excused by their brilliancy, such
+as those of Jael, of Deborah, of Brutus, and of Charlotte
+Corday--further than this the maxim is satire.>
+
+XXXVI.--One never finds in man good or evil in
+excess. (1665, No. 201.)
+
+XXXVII.--Those who are incapable of committing
+great crimes do not easily suspect others. (1665,
+No. {2}08.)
+
+{The text incorrectly numbers this maxim as 508. It
+is 208.}
+
+XXXVIII.--The pomp of funerals concerns rather
+the vanity of the living, than the honour of the
+dead. (1665, No. 213.)
+
+XXXIX.--Whatever variety and change appears in
+the world, we may remark a secret chain, and a regu-
+lated order of all time by Providence, which makes
+everything follow in due rank and fall into its de-
+stined course. (1665, No. 225.)
+
+XL.--Intrepidity should sustain the heart in con-
+spiracies in place of valour which alone furnishes all
+the firmness which is necessary for the perils of war.
+(1665, No. 231.)
+
+XLI.--Those who wish to define victory by her birth
+will be tempted to imitate the poets, and to call her
+the Daughter of Heaven, since they cannot find her
+origin on earth. Truly she is produced from an
+infinity of actions, which instead of wishing to beget
+her, only look to the particular interests of their
+masters, since all those who compose an army, in
+aiming at their own rise and glory, produce a good
+so great and general. (1665, No. 232.)
+
+XLII.--That man who has never been in danger
+cannot answer for his courage. (1665, No. 236.)
+
+XLIII.--We more often place bounds on our grati-
+tude than on our desires and our hopes. (1665, No.
+241.)
+
+XLIV.--Imitation is always unhappy, for all which
+is counterfeit displeases by the very things which
+charm us when they are original (NATURELLES). (1665,
+No. 245.)
+
+XLV.--We do not regret the loss of our friends ac-
+cording to THEIR merits, but according to OUR wants,
+and the opinion with which we believed we had im-
+pressed them of our worth. (1665, No. 248.)
+
+XLVI.--It is very hard to separate the general
+goodness spread all over the world from great clever-
+ness. (1665, No. 252.)
+
+XLVII.--For us to be always good, others should
+believe that they cannot behave wickedly to us with
+impunity. (1665, No. 254.)
+
+XLVIII.--A confidence in being able to please is
+often an infallible means of being displeasing. (1665,
+No. 256.)
+
+XLIX.--The confidence we have in ourselves arises
+in a great measure from that that we have in others.
+(1665, No. 258.)
+
+L.--There is a general revolution which changes
+the tastes of the mind as well as the fortunes of the
+world. (1665, No. 250.)
+
+LI.--Truth is foundation and the reason of the per-
+fection of beauty, for of whatever stature a thing may
+be, it cannot be beautiful and perfect unless it be
+truly that she should be, and possess truly all that she
+should have (1665, No. 260.)
+
+[Beauty is truth, truth beauty.{--John Keats, “Ode on a
+a Grecian Urn,” (1820), Stanza 5}]
+
+LII.--There are fine things which are more bril-
+liant when unfinished than when finished too much.
+(1665, No. 262.)
+
+LIII.--Magnanimity is a noble effort of pride which
+makes a man master of himself, to make him master
+of all things. (1665, No. 271.)
+
+LIV.--Luxury and too refined a policy in states are
+a sure presage of their fall, because all parties looking
+after their own interest turn away from the public
+good. (1665, No. 282.)
+
+LV.--Of all passions that which is least known to
+us is idleness; she is the most ardent and evil of all,
+although her violence may be insensible, and the evils
+she causes concealed; if we consider her power
+attentively we shall find that in all encounters she
+makes herself mistress of our sentiments, our in-
+terests, and our pleasures; like the (fabled) Remora,
+she can stop the greatest vessels, she is a hidden rock,
+more dangerous in the most important matters than
+sudden squalls and the most violent tempests. The
+repose of idleness is a magic charm which suddenly
+suspends the most ardent pursuits and the most
+obstinate resolutions. In fact to give a true notion of
+this passion we must add that idleness, like a beati-
+tude of the soul, consoles us for all losses and fills the
+vacancy of all our wants. (1665, No. 290.)
+
+LVI.--We are very fond of reading others' characters,
+but we do not like to be read ourselves. (1665, No. 296.)
+
+LVII.--What a tiresome malady is that which forces
+one to preserve your health by a severe regimen.
+(IBID, No. 298.)
+
+LVIII.--It is much easier to take love when one is
+free, than to get rid of it after having taken it. (1665,
+No. 300.)
+
+LIX.--Women for the most part surrender them-
+selves more from weakness than from passion. Whence
+it is that bold and pushing men succeed better than
+others, although they are not so loveable. (1665, No.
+301.)
+
+LX.--Not to love is in love, an infallible means of
+being beloved. (1665, No. 302.)
+
+LXI.--The sincerity which lovers and mistresses ask
+that both should know when they cease to love each
+other, arises much less from a wish to be warned of
+the cessation of love, than from a desire to be assured
+that they are beloved although no one denies it.
+(1665, No. 303.)
+
+LXII.--The most just comparison of love is that of
+a fever, and we have no power over either, as to its
+violence or its duration. (1665, No. 305.)
+
+LXIII.--The greatest skill of the least skilful is to
+know how to submit to the direction of another.
+(1665, No. 309.)
+
+LXIV.--We always fear to see those whom we love
+when we have been flirting with others. (16{74}, No.
+372.)
+
+LXV.--We ought to console ourselves for our faults
+when we have strength enough to own them. (16{74},
+No. 375.)
+
+{The date of the previous two maxims is incorrectly cited
+as 1665 in the text. I found this date immediately suspect
+because the translators' introduction states that the 1665
+edition only had 316 maxims. In fact, the two maxims only
+appeared in the fourth of the first five editions (1674).}
+
+
+
+SECOND SUPPLEMENT.
+
+REFLECTIONS,
+EXTRACTED FROM
+MS. LETTERS IN THE ROYAL LIBRARY.*
+
+*<A LA BIBLIOTHEQUE DU ROI, it is difficult at present
+(June 1871) to assign a name to the magnificent collection
+of books in Paris, the property of the nation.>
+
+
+LXVI.--Interest is the soul of self-love, in as much
+as when the body deprived of its soul is without sight,
+feeling or knowledge, without thought or movement,
+so self-love, riven so to speak from its interest, neither
+sees, nor hears, nor smells, nor moves; thus it is that
+the same man who will run over land and sea for his
+own interest becomes suddenly paralyzed when en-
+gaged for that of others; from this arises that sudden
+dulness and, as it were, death, with which we afflict
+those to whom we speak of our own matters; from this
+also their sudden resurrection when in our narrative
+we relate something concerning them; from this we
+find in our conversations and business that a man
+becomes dull or bright just as his own interest is near
+to him or distant from him. (LETTER TO MADAME DE
+SABLÉ, MS., FOL. 211.)
+
+LXVII.--Why we cry out so much against maxims
+which lay bare the heart of man, is because we fear
+that our own heart shall be laid bare. (MAXIM 103,
+MS., fol. 310.*)
+
+*<The reader will recognise in these extracts portions of the
+Maxims previously given, sometimes the author has care-
+fully polished them; at other times the words are identical.
+Our numbers will indicate where they are to be found in
+the foregoing collection.>
+
+LXVIII.--Hope and fear are inseparable. (TO
+MADAME DE SABLÉ, MS., FOL. 222, MAX. 168.)
+
+LXIX.--It is a common thing to hazard life to escape
+dishonour; but, when this is done, the actor takes
+very little pain to make the enterprise succeed in
+which he is engaged, and certain it is that they who
+hazard their lives to take a city or to conquer a pro-
+vince are better officers, have more merit, and wider
+and more useful, views than they who merely expose
+themselves to vindicate their honour; it is very com-
+mon to find people of the latter class, very rare to
+find those of the former. (LETTER TO M. ESPRIT, MS.,
+FOL. 173, MAX. 219.)
+
+LXX.--The taste changes, but the will remains the
+same. (TO MADAME DE SABLÉ, FOL. 223, MAX. 252.)
+
+LXXI.--The power which women whom we love
+have over us is greater than that which we have over
+ourselves. (TO THE SAME, MS., FOL. 211, MAX. 259)
+
+LXXII.--That which makes us believe so easily that
+others have defects is that we all so easily believe
+what we wish. (TO THE SAME, MS., FOL. 223, MAX. 397.)
+
+LXXIII.--I am perfectly aware that good sense and
+fine wit are tedious to every age, but tastes are not
+always the same, and what is good at one time will
+not seem so at another. This makes me think that
+few persons know how to be old. (TO THE SAME,
+FOL. 202, MAX. 423.)
+
+LXXIV.--God has permitted, to punish man for his
+original sin, that he should be so fond of his self-love,
+that he should be tormented by it in all the actions
+of his life. (MS., FOL. 310, MAX. 494.)
+
+LXXV.--And so far it seems to me the philosophy
+of a lacquey can go; I believe that all gaity in that state
+of life is very doubtful indeed. (TO MADAME DE SABLÉ,
+FOL. 161, MAX. 504.)
+
+[In the maxim cited the author relates how a footman
+about to be broken on the wheel danced on the scaffold.
+He seems to think that in his day the life of such servants
+was so miserable that their merriment was very doubtful.]
+
+
+
+THIRD SUPPLEMENT
+
+[The fifty following Maxims are taken from the Sixth
+Edition of the PENSÉES DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, published
+by Claude Barbin, in 1693, more than twelve years after
+the death of the author (17th May, 1680). The reader
+will find some repetitions, but also some very valuable
+maxims.]
+
+
+LXXVI.--Many persons wish to be devout; but
+no one wishes to be humble.
+
+LXXVII.--The labour of the body frees us from
+the pains of the mind, and thus makes the poor happy.
+
+LXXVIII.--True penitential sorrows (mortifica-
+tions) are those which are not known, vanity renders
+the others easy enough.
+
+LXXIX.--Humility is the altar upon which God
+wishes that we should offer him his sacrifices.
+
+LXXX.--Few things are needed to make a wise man
+happy; nothing can make a fool content; that is why
+most men are miserable.
+
+LXXXI.--We trouble ourselves less to become
+happy, than to make others believe we are so.
+
+LXXXII.--It is more easy to extinguish the first
+desire than to satisfy those which follow.
+
+LXXXIII.--Wisdom is to the soul what health is to
+the body.
+
+LXXXIV.--The great ones of the earth can neither
+command health of body nor repose of mind, and
+they buy always at too dear a price the good they can
+acquire.
+
+LXXXV.--Before strongly desiring anything we
+should examine what happiness he has who possesses it.
+
+LXXXVI.--A true friend is the greatest of all
+goods, and that of which we think least of acquiring.
+
+LXXXVII.--Lovers do not wish to see the faults of
+their mistresses until their enchantment is at an end.
+
+LXXXVIII.--Prudence and love are not made for
+each other; in the ratio that love increases, prudence
+diminishes.
+
+LXXXIX.--It is sometimes pleasing to a husband
+to have a jealous wife; he hears her always speaking
+of the beloved object.
+
+XC.--How much is a woman to be pitied who is at
+the same time possessed of virtue and love!
+
+XCI.--The wise man finds it better not to enter
+the encounter than to conquer.
+
+[Somewhat similar to Goldsmith's sage--
+ “Who quits {a} world where strong temptations try,
+ And since 'tis hard to co{mbat}, learns to fly.”]
+
+XCII.--It is more necessary to study men than
+books.
+
+[“The proper study of mankind is man.”--Pope
+{ESSAY ON MAN, (1733), EPISTLE II, line 2}.]
+
+XCIII.--Good and evil ordinarily come to those who
+have most of one or the other.
+
+XCIV.--The accent and character of one's native
+country dwells in the mind and heart as on the tongue.
+(REPITITION OF MAXIM 342.)
+
+XCV.--The greater part of men have qualities
+which, like those of plants, are discovered by chance.
+(REPITITION OF MAXIM 344.)
+
+XCVI.--A good woman is a hidden treasure; he
+who discovers her will do well not to boast about it.
+(SEE MAXIM 368.)
+
+XCVII.--Most women do not weep for the loss
+of a lover to show that they have been loved so much
+as to show that they are worth being loved. (SEE
+MAXIM 362.)
+
+XCVIII.--There are many virtuous women who
+are weary of the part they have played. (SEE MAXIM
+367.)
+
+XCIX.--If we think we love for love's sake we
+are much mistaken. (SEE MAXIM 374.)
+
+C.--The restraint we lay upon ourselves to be con-
+stant, is not much better than an inconstancy. (SEE
+MAXIMS 369, 381.)
+
+CI.--There are those who avoid our jealousy, of
+whom we ought to be jealous. (SEE MAXIM 359.)
+
+CII.--Jealousy is always born with love, but does
+not always die with it. (SEE MAXIM 361.)
+
+CIII.--When we love too much it is difficult to
+discover when we have ceased to be beloved.
+
+CIV.--We know very well that we should not talk
+about our wives, but we do not remember that it is
+not so well to speak of ourselves. (SEE MAXIM 364.)
+
+CV.--Chance makes us known to others and to our-
+selves. (SEE MAXIM 345.)
+
+CVI.--We find very few people of good sense, ex-
+cept those who are of our own opinion. (SEE MAXIM
+347.)
+
+CVII.--We commonly praise the good hearts of
+those who admire us. (SEE MAXIM 356.)
+
+CVIII.--Man only blames himself in order that he
+may be praised.
+
+CIX.--Little minds are wounded by the smallest
+things. (SEE MAXIM 357.)
+
+CX.--There are certain faults which placed in a good
+light please more than perfection itself. (SEE MAXIM
+354.)
+
+CXI.--That which makes us so bitter against those
+who do us a shrewd turn, is because they think them-
+selves more clever than we are. (SEE MAXIM 350.)
+
+CXII.--We are always bored by those whom we
+bore. (SEE MAXIM 352.)
+
+CXIII.--The harm that others do us is often less
+than that we do ourselves. (SEE MAXIM 363.)
+
+CXIV.--It is never more difficult to speak well
+than when we are ashamed of being silent.
+
+CXV.--Those faults are always pardonable that we
+have the courage to avow.
+
+CXVI.--The greatest fault of penetration is not
+that it goes to the bottom of a matter--but beyond it.
+(SEE MAXIM 377.)
+
+CXVII.--We give advice, but we cannot give the
+wisdom to profit by it. (SEE MAXIM 378.)
+
+CXVIII.--When our merit declines, our taste de-
+clines also. (SEE MAXIM 379.)
+
+CXIX.--Fortune discovers our vices and our vir-
+tues, as the light makes objects plain to the sight.
+(SEE MAXIM 380.)
+
+CXX.--Our actions are like rhymed verse-ends
+(BOUTS-RIMÉS) which everyone turns as he pleases. (SEE
+MAXIM 382.)
+
+CXXI.--There is nothing more natural, nor more
+deceptive, than to believe that we are beloved.
+
+CXXII.--We would rather see those to whom we
+have done a benefit, than those who have done us one.
+
+CXXIII.--It is more difficult to hide the opinions
+we have than to feign those which we have not.
+
+CXXIV.--Renewed friendships require more care
+than those that have never been broken.
+
+CXXV.--A man to whom no one is pleasing is
+much more unhappy than one who pleases nobody.
+
+
+
+REFLECTIONS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS,
+BY THE
+DUKE DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
+
+
+I. On Confidence.
+
+
+Though sincerity and confidence have many
+points of resemblance, they have yet many
+points of difference.
+
+Sincerity is an openness of heart, which
+shows us what we are, a love of truth, a dis-
+like to deception, a wish to compensate our faults and
+to lessen them by the merit of confessing them.
+
+Confidence leaves us less liberty, its rules are
+stricter, it requires more prudence and reticence, and
+we are not always free to give it. It relates not only
+to ourselves, since our interests are often mixed up
+with those of others; it requires great delicacy not to
+expose our friends in exposing ourselves, not to draw
+upon their goodness to enhance the value of what we
+give.
+
+Confidence always pleases those who receive it. It
+is a tribute we pay to their merit, a deposit we commit
+to their trust, a pledge which gives them a claim upon
+us, a kind of dependence to which we voluntarily
+submit. I do not wish from what I have said to
+depreciate confidence, so necessary to man. It is
+in society the link between acquaintance and
+friendship. I only wish to state its limits to make
+it true and real. I would that it was always sincere,
+always discreet, and that it had neither weakness nor
+interest. I know it is hard to place proper limits on
+being taken into all our friends' confidence, and taking
+them into all ours.
+
+Most frequently we make confidants from vanity, a
+love of talking, a wish to win the confidence of others,
+and make an exchange of secrets.
+
+Some may have a motive for confiding in us, towards
+whom we have no motive for confiding. With them we
+discharge the obligation in keeping their secrets and
+trusting them with small confidences.
+
+Others whose fidelity we know trust nothing to
+us, but we confide in them by choice and inclina-
+tion.
+
+We should hide from them nothing that concerns
+us, we should always show them with equal truth, our
+virtues and our vices, without exaggerating the one
+or diminishing the other. We should make it a rule
+never to have half confidences. They always embarrass
+those who give them, and dissatisfy those who receive
+them. They shed an uncertain light on what we want
+hidden, increase curiosity, entitling the recipients to
+know more, giving them leave to consider themselves
+free to talk of what they have guessed. It is far
+safer and more honest to tell nothing than to be
+silent when we have begun to tell. There are other
+rules to be observed in matters confided to us, all are
+important, to all prudence and trust are essential.
+
+Everyone agrees that a secret should be kept intact,
+but everyone does not agree as to the nature and
+importance of secresy. Too often we consult our-
+selves as to what we should say, what we should leave
+unsaid. There are few permanent secrets, and the
+scruple against revealing them will not last for ever.
+
+With those friends whose truth we know we have
+the closest intimacy. They have always spoken unre-
+servedly to us, we should always do the same to them.
+They know our habits and connexions, and see too
+clearly not to perceive the slightest change. They
+may have elsewhere learnt what we have promised not
+to tell. It is not in our power to tell them what has
+been entrusted to us, though it might tend to their
+interest to know it. We feel as confident of them
+as of ourselves, and we are reduced to the hard fate of
+losing their friendship, which is dear to us, or of being
+faithless as regards a secret. This is doubtless the
+hardest test of fidelity, but it should not move an
+honest man; it is then that he can sacrifice himself
+to others. His first duty is to rigidly keep his trust
+in its entirety. He should not only control and
+guard his and his voice, but even his lighter
+talk, so that nothing be seen in his conversation or
+manner that could direct the curiosity of others towards
+that which he wishes to conceal.
+
+We have often need of strength and prudence
+wherewith to oppose the exigencies of most of our
+friends who make a claim on our confidence, and
+seek to know all about us. We should never allow
+them to acquire this unexceptionable right. There
+are accidents and circumstances which do not fall in
+their cognizance; if they complain, we should endure
+their complaints and excuse ourselves with gentleness,
+but if they are still unreasonable, we should sacrifice
+their friendship to our duty, and choose between two
+inevitable evils, the one reparable, the other irre-
+parable.
+
+
+II. On Difference of Character.
+
+
+Although all the qualities of mind may be united in
+a great genius, yet there are some which are special
+and peculiar to him; his views are unlimited; he
+always acts uniformly and with the same activity;
+he sees distant objects as if present; he compre-
+hends and grasps the greatest, sees and notices the
+smallest matters; his thoughts are elevated, broad,
+just and intelligible. Nothing escapes his observation,
+and he often finds truth in spite of the obscurity that
+hides her from others.
+
+A lofty mind always thinks nobly, it easily creates
+vivid, agreeable, and natural fancies, places them in
+their best light, clothes them with all appropriate
+adornments, studies others' tastes, and clears away
+from its own thoughts all that is useless and dis-
+agreeable.
+
+A clever, pliant, winning mind knows how to avoid
+and overcome difficulties. Bending easily to what it
+wants, it understands the inclination and temper it is
+dealing with, and by managing their interests it
+advances and establishes its own.
+
+A well regulated mind sees all things as they should
+be seen, appraises them at their proper value, turns
+them to its own advantage, and adheres firmly to its
+own opinions as it knows all their force and weight.
+
+A difference exists between a working mind and a
+business-like mind. We can undertake business with-
+out turning it to our own interest. Some are clever
+only in what does not concern them, and the reverse
+in all that does. There are others again whose
+cleverness is limited to their own business, and who
+know how to turn everything to their own advantage.
+
+It is possible to have a serious turn of mind, and
+yet to talk pleasantly and cheerfully. This class of
+mind is suited to all persons in all times of life.
+Young persons have usually a cheerful and satirical
+turn, untempered by seriousness, thus often making
+themselves disagreeable.
+
+No part is easier to play than that of being always
+pleasant; and the applause we sometimes receive in
+censuring others is not worth being exposed to the
+chance of offending them when they are out of
+temper.
+
+Satire is at once the most agreeable and most dan-
+gerous of mental qualities. It always pleases when it
+is refined, but we always fear those who use it too
+much, yet satire should be allowed when unmixed
+with spite, and when the person satirised can join in
+the satire.
+
+It is unfortunate to have a satirical turn without
+affecting to be pleased or without loving to jest. It
+requires much adroitness to continue satirical with-
+out falling into one of these extremes.
+
+Raillery is a kind of mirth which takes possession
+of the imagination, and shows every object in an
+absurd light; wit combines more or less softness or
+harshness.
+
+There is a kind of refined and flattering raillery that
+only hits the faults that persons admit, which under-
+stands how to hide the praise it gives under the ap-
+pearance of blame, and shows the good while feigning
+a wish to hide it.
+
+An acute mind and a cunning mind are very dis-
+similar. The first always pleases; it is unfettered, it
+perceives the most delicate and sees the most impercep-
+tible matters. A cunning spirit never goes straight, it
+endeavours to secure its object by byeways and short
+cuts. This conduct is soon found out, it always gives
+rise to distrust and never reaches greatness.
+
+There is a difference between an ardent and a
+brilliant mind, a fiery spirit travels further and faster,
+while a brilliant mind is sparkling, attractive, accu-
+rate.
+
+Gentleness of mind is an easy and accommodating
+manner which always pleases when not insipid.
+
+A mind full of details devotes itself to the manage-
+ment and regulation of the smallest particulars it
+meets with. This distinction is usually limited to
+little matters, yet it is not absolutely incompatible
+with greatness, and when these two qualities are
+united in the same mind they raise it infinitely above
+others.
+
+The expression “BEL ESPRIT” is much perverted, for
+all that one can say of the different kinds of mind
+meet together in the “BEL ESPRIT.” Yet as the epithet
+is bestowed on an infinite number of bad poets and
+tedious authors, it is more often used to ridicule than
+to praise.
+
+There are yet many other epithets for the mind
+which mean the same thing, the difference lies in the
+tone and manner of saying them, but as tones and
+manner cannot appear in writing I shall not go into
+distinctions I cannot explain. Custom explains this
+in saying that a man has wit, has much wit, that he
+is a great wit; there are tones and manners which
+make all the difference between phrases which seem
+all alike on paper, and yet express a different order of
+mind.
+
+So we say that a man has only one kind of wit, that
+he has several, that he has every variety of wit.
+
+One can be a fool with much wit, and one need not
+be a fool even with very little wit.
+
+To have much mind is a doubtful expression. It
+may mean every class of mind that can be mentioned,
+it may mean none in particular. It may mean that
+he talks sensibly while he acts foolishly. We may
+have a mind, but a narrow one. A mind may be
+fitted for some things, not for others. We may have
+a large measure of mind fitted for nothing, and one is
+often inconvenienced with much mind; still of this
+kind of mind we may say that it is sometimes pleasing
+in society.
+
+Though the gifts of the mind are infinite, they can,
+it seems to me, be thus classified.
+
+There are some so beautiful that everyone can see
+and feel their beauty.
+
+There are some lovely, it is true, but which are
+wearisome.
+
+There are some which are lovely, which all the
+world admire, but without knowing why.
+
+There are some so refined and delicate that few are
+capable even of remarking all their beauties.
+
+There are others which, though imperfect, yet are
+produced with such skill, and sustained and managed
+with such sense and grace, that they even deserve to
+be admired.
+
+
+III. On Taste.
+
+
+Some persons have more wit than taste, others have
+more taste than wit. There is greater vanity and
+caprice in taste than in wit.
+
+The word taste has different meanings, which it is
+easy to mistake. There is a difference between the
+taste which in certain objects has an attraction for
+us, and the taste that makes us understand and
+distinguish the qualities we judge by.
+
+We may like a comedy without having a sufficiently
+fine and delicate taste to criticise it accurately. Some
+tastes lead us imperceptibly to objects, from which
+others carry us away by their force or intensity.
+
+Some persons have bad taste in everything, others
+have bad taste only in some things, but a correct and
+good taste in matters within their capacity. Some
+have peculiar taste, which they know to be bad, but
+which they still follow. Some have a doubtful taste,
+and let chance decide, their indecision makes them
+change, and they are affected with pleasure or weari-
+ness on their friends' judgment. Others are always
+prejudiced, they are the slaves of their tastes, which
+they adhere to in everything. Some know what is
+good, and are horrified at what is not; their opinions
+are clear and true, and they find the reason for their
+taste in their mind and understanding.
+
+Some have a species of instinct (the source of which
+they are ignorant of), and decide all questions that
+come before them by its aid, and always decide
+rightly.
+
+These follow their taste more than their intelligence,
+because they do not permit their temper and self-love
+to prevail over their natural discernment. All they
+do is in harmony, all is in the same spirit. This
+harmony makes them decide correctly on matters, and
+form a correct estimate of their value. But speaking
+generally there are few who have a taste fixed and
+independent of that of their friends, they follow
+example and fashion which generally form the stand-
+ard of taste.
+
+In all the diversities of taste that we discern, it is
+very rare and almost impossible to meet with that sort
+of good taste that knows how to set a price on the
+particular, and yet understands the right value that
+should be placed on all. Our knowledge is too limited,
+and that correct discernment of good qualities which
+goes to form a correct judgment is too seldom to be
+met with except in regard to matters that do not
+concern us.
+
+As regards ourselves our taste has not this all-
+important discernment. Preoccupation, trouble, all
+that concern us, present it to us in another aspect.
+We do not see with the same eyes what does and
+what does not relate to us. Our taste is guided by
+the bent of our self-love and temper, which supplies
+us with new views which we adapt to an infinite
+number of changes and uncertainties. Our taste is
+no longer our own, we cease to control it, without our
+consent it changes, and the same objects appear to us
+in such divers aspects that ultimately we fail to per-
+ceive what we have seen and heard.
+
+
+IV. On Society.
+
+
+In speaking of society my plan is not to speak of
+friendship, for, though they have some connection,
+they are yet very different. The former has more
+in it of greatness and humility, and the greatest
+merit of the latter is to resemble the former.
+
+For the present I shall speak of that particular
+kind of intercourse that gentlemen should have with
+each other. It would be idle to show how far society
+is essential to men: all seek for it, and all find it, but
+few adopt the method of making it pleasant and
+lasting.
+
+Everyone seeks to find his pleasure and his advan-
+tage at the expense of others. We prefer ourselves
+always to those with whom we intend to live, and
+they almost always perceive the preference. It is
+this which disturbs and destroys society. We should
+discover a means to hide this love of selection since it
+is too ingrained in us to be in our power to destroy.
+We should make our pleasure that of other persons, to
+humour, never to wound their self-love.
+
+The mind has a great part to do in so great a work,
+but it is not merely sufficient for us to guide it in the
+different courses it should hold.
+
+The agreement we meet between minds would not
+keep society together for long if she was not governed
+and sustained by good sense, temper, and by the con-
+sideration which ought to exist between persons who
+have to live together.
+
+It sometimes happens that persons opposite in tem-
+per and mind become united. They doubtless hold
+together for different reasons, which cannot last for
+long. Society may subsist between those who are our
+inferiors by birth or by personal qualities, but those
+who have these advantages should not abuse them.
+They should seldom let it be perceived that they
+serve to instruct others. They should let their con-
+duct show that they, too, have need to be guided and
+led by reason, and accommodate themselves as far as
+possible to the feeling and the interests of the others.
+
+To make society pleasant, it is essential that each
+should retain his freedom of action. A man should
+not see himself, or he should see himself without
+dependence, and at the same time amuse himself. He
+should have the power of separating himself without
+that separation bringing any change on the society.
+He should have the power to pass by one and the
+other, if he does not wish to expose himself to occa-
+sional embarrassments; and he should remember that
+he is often bored when he believes he has not the
+power even to bore. He should share in what he
+believes to be the amusement of persons with whom
+he wishes to live, but he should not always be liable
+to the trouble of providing them.
+
+Complaisance is essential in society, but it should
+have its limits, it becomes a slavery when it is extreme.
+We should so render a free consent, that in following
+the opinion of our friends they should believe that they
+follow ours.
+
+We should readily excuse our friends when their
+faults are born with them, and they are less than
+their good qualities. We should often avoid to show
+what they have said, and what they have left unsaid.
+We should try to make them perceive their faults, so
+as to give them the merit of correcting them.
+
+There is a kind of politeness which is necessary in
+the intercourse among gentlemen, it makes them
+comprehend badinage, and it keeps them from using
+and employing certain figures of speech, too rude and
+unrefined, which are often used thoughtlessly when
+we hold to our opinion with too much warmth.
+
+The intercourse of gentlemen cannot subsist without
+a certain kind of confidence; this should be equal on
+both sides. Each should have an appearance of
+sincerity and of discretion which never causes the
+fear of anything imprudent being said.
+
+There should be some variety in wit. Those who
+have only one kind of wit cannot please for long
+unless they can take different roads, and not both use
+the same talents, thus adding to the pleasure of
+society, and keeping the same harmony that different
+voices and different instruments should observe in
+music; and as it is detrimental to the quiet of society,
+that many persons should have the same interests,
+it is yet as necessary for it that their interests should
+not be different.
+
+We should anticipate what can please our friends,
+find out how to be useful to them so as to exempt them
+from annoyance, and when we cannot avert evils,
+seem to participate in them, insensibly obliterate
+without attempting to destroy them at a blow, and
+place agreeable objects in their place, or at least such
+as will interest them. We should talk of subjects
+that concern them, but only so far as they like, and
+we should take great care where we draw the line.
+There is a species of politeness, and we may say a
+similar species of humanity, which does not enter too
+quickly into the recesses of the heart. It often takes
+pains to allow us to see all that our friends know,
+while they have still the advantage of not knowing
+to the full when we have penetrated the depth of the
+heart.
+
+Thus the intercourse between gentlemen at once
+gives them familiarity and furnishes them with an
+infinite number of subjects on which to talk freely.
+
+Few persons have sufficient tact and good sense
+fairly to appreciate many matters that are essential
+to maintain society. We desire to turn away at a
+certain point, but we do not want to be mixed up
+in everything, and we fear to know all kinds of
+truth.
+
+As we should stand at a certain distance to view
+objects, so we should also stand at a distance to observe
+society; each has its proper point of view from which
+it should be regarded. It is quite right that it
+should not be looked at too closely, for there is hardly
+a man who in all matters allows himself to be seen as
+he really is.
+
+
+V. On Conversation.
+
+
+The reason why so few persons are agreeable in con-
+versation is that each thinks more of what he desires
+to say, than of what the others say, and that we
+make bad listeners when we want to speak.
+
+Yet it is necessary to listen to those who talk, we
+should give them the time they want, and let them say
+even senseless things; never contradict or interrupt
+them; on the contrary, we should enter into their mind
+and taste, illustrate their meaning, praise anything
+they say that deserves praise, and let them see we
+praise more from our choice than from agreement
+with them.
+
+To please others we should talk on subjects they
+like and that interest them, avoid disputes upon in-
+different matters, seldom ask questions, and never let
+them see that we pretend to be better informed than
+they are.
+
+We should talk in a more or less serious manner,
+and upon more or less abstruse subjects, according to
+the temper and understanding of the persons we talk
+with, and readily give them the advantage of deciding
+without obliging them to answer when they are not
+anxious to talk.
+
+After having in this way fulfilled the duties of
+politeness, we can speak our opinions to our listeners
+when we find an opportunity without a sign of pre-
+sumption or opinionatedness. Above all things we
+should avoid often talking of ourselves and giving
+ourselves as an example; nothing is more tiresome
+than a man who quotes himself for everything.
+
+We cannot give too great study to find out the
+manner and the capacity of those with whom we talk,
+so as to join in the conversation of those who have
+more than ourselves without hurting by this prefer-
+ence the wishes or interests of others.
+
+Then we should modestly use all the modes above-
+mentioned to show our thoughts to them, and make
+them, if possible, believe that we take our ideas from
+them.
+
+We should never say anything with an air of
+authority, nor show any superiority of mind. We
+should avoid far-fetched expressions, expressions hard
+or forced, and never let the words be grander than
+the matter.
+
+It is not wrong to retain our opinions if they are
+reasonable, but we should yield to reason, wherever
+she appears and from whatever side she comes, she
+alone should govern our opinions, we should follow
+her without opposing the opinions of others, and
+without seeming to ignore what they say.
+
+It is dangerous to seek to be always the leader of the
+conversation, and to push a good argument too hard,
+when we have found one. Civility often hides half its
+understanding, and when it meets with an opinionated
+man who defends the bad side, spares him the disgrace
+of giving way.
+
+We are sure to displease when we speak too long
+and too often of one subject, and when we try to turn
+the conversation upon subjects that we think more
+instructive than others, we should enter indifferently
+upon every subject that is agreeable to others, stop-
+ping where they wish, and avoiding all they do not
+agree with.
+
+Every kind of conversation, however witty it may
+be, is not equally fitted for all clever persons; we
+should select what is to their taste and suitable to
+their condition, their sex, their talents, and also choose
+the time to say it.
+
+We should observe the place, the occasion, the
+temper in which we find the person who listens to us,
+for if there is much art in speaking to the purpose,
+there is no less in knowing when to be silent. There
+is an eloquent silence which serves to approve or to
+condemn, there is a silence of discretion and of respect.
+In a word, there is a tone, an air, a manner, which
+renders everything in conversation agreeable or dis-
+agreeable, refined or vulgar.
+
+But it is given to few persons to keep this secret
+well. Those who lay down rules too often break
+them, and the safest we are able to give is to listen
+much, to speak little, and to say nothing that will ever
+give ground for regret.
+
+
+VI. Falsehood.
+
+
+We are false in different ways. There are some
+men who are false from wishing always to appear what
+they are not. There are some who have better faith,
+who are born false, who deceive themselves, and who
+never see themselves as they really are; to some is
+given a true understanding and a false taste, others
+have a false understanding and some correctness in
+taste; there are some who have not any falsity
+either in taste or mind. These last are very rare, for
+to speak generally, there is no one who has not some
+falseness in some corner of his mind or his taste.
+
+What makes this falseness so universal, is that as
+our qualities are uncertain and confused, so too, are
+our tastes; we do not see things exactly as they are,
+we value them more or less than they are worth, and
+do not bring them into unison with ourselves in a
+manner which suits them or suits our condition or
+qualities.
+
+This mistake gives rise to an infinite number of
+falsities in the taste and in the mind. Our self-love
+is flattered by all that presents itself to us under the
+guise of good.
+
+But as there are many kinds of good which affect
+our vanity and our temper, so they are often followed
+from custom or advantage. We follow because the
+others follow, without considering that the same feeling
+ought not to be equally embarrassing to all kinds of
+persons, and that it should attach itself more or less
+firmly, according as persons agree more or less with
+those who follow them.
+
+We dread still more to show falseness in taste than
+in mind. Gentleness should approve without preju-
+dice what deserves to be approved, follow what
+deserves to be followed, and take offence at nothing.
+But there should be great distinction and great
+accuracy. We should distinguish between what is
+good in the abstract and what is good for ourselves,
+and always follow in reason the natural inclination
+which carries us towards matters that please us.
+
+If men only wished to excel by the help of their
+own talents, and in following their duty, there would
+be nothing false in their taste or in their conduct.
+They would show what they were, they would judge
+matters by their lights, and they would attract by their
+reason. There would be a discernment in their views,
+in their sentiments, their taste would be true, it would
+come to them direct, and not from others, they would
+follow from choice and not from habit or chance. If
+we are false in admiring what should not be admired,
+it is oftener from envy that we affix a value to
+qualities which are good in themselves, but which do
+not become us. A magistrate is false when he flatters
+himself he is brave, and that he will be able to be bold
+in certain cases. He should be as firm and stedfast
+in a plot which ought to be stifled without fear of
+being false, as he would be false and absurd in fighting
+a duel about it.
+
+A woman may like science, but all sciences are not
+suitable for her, and the doctrines of certain sciences
+never become her, and when applied by her are always
+false.
+
+We should allow reason and good sense to fix the
+value of things, they should determine our taste
+and give things the merit they deserve, and the im-
+portance it is fitting we should give them. But
+nearly all men are deceived in the price and in the
+value, and in these mistakes there is always a kind of
+falseness.
+
+
+VII. On Air and Manner.
+
+
+There is an air which belongs to the figure and
+talents of each individual; we always lose it when
+we abandon it to assume another.
+
+We should try to find out what air is natural to us
+and never abandon it, but make it as perfect as we can.
+This is the reason that the majority of children please.
+It is because they are wrapt up in the air and manner
+nature has given them, and are ignorant of any other.
+They are changed and corrupted when they quit
+infancy, they think they should imitate what they
+see, and they are not altogether able to imitate it. In
+this imitation there is always something of falsity and
+uncertainty. They have nothing settled in their man-
+ner and opinions. Instead of being in reality what
+they want to appear, they seek to appear what they
+are not.
+
+All men want to be different, and to be greater than
+they are; they seek for an air other than their own,
+and a mind different from what they possess; they
+take their style and manner at chance. They make
+experiments upon themselves without considering
+that what suits one person will not suit everyone,
+that there is no universal rule for taste or manners,
+and that there are no good copies.
+
+Few men, nevertheless, can have unison in many
+matters without being a copy of each other, if each
+follow his natural turn of mind. But in general a
+person will not wholly follow it. He loves to imitate.
+We often imitate the same person without perceiving
+it, and we neglect our own good qualities for the good
+qualities of others, which generally do not suit us.
+
+I do not pretend, from what I say, that each should
+so wrap himself up in himself as not to be able
+to follow example, or to add to his own, useful and
+serviceable habits, which nature has not given him.
+Arts and sciences may be proper for the greater part
+of those who are capable for them. Good manners and
+politeness are proper for all the world. But, yet
+acquired qualities should always have a certain agree-
+ment and a certain union with our own natural
+qualities, which they imperceptibly extend and in-
+crease. We are elevated to a rank and dignity above
+ourselves. We are often engaged in a new profession
+for which nature has not adapted us. All these con-
+ditions have each an air which belong to them, but
+which does not always agree with our natural manner.
+This change of our fortune often changes our air and
+our manners, and augments the air of dignity, which
+is always false when it is too marked, and when it is
+not united and amalgamated with that which nature
+has given us. We should unite and blend them to-
+gether, and thus render them such that they can
+never be separated.
+
+We should not speak of all subjects in one
+tone and in the same manner. We do not march
+at the head of a regiment as we walk on a pro-
+menade; and we should use the same style in which
+we should naturally speak of different things in the
+same way, with the same difference as we should walk,
+but always naturally, and as is suitable, either at
+the head of a regiment or on a promenade. There
+are some who are not content to abandon the air and
+manner natural to them to assume those of the rank
+and dignities to which they have arrived. There are
+some who assume prematurely the air of the dignities
+and rank to which they aspire. How many lieutenant-
+generals assume to be marshals of France, how many
+barristers vainly repeat the style of the Chancellor
+and how many female citizens give themselves the
+airs of duchesses.
+
+But what we are most often vexed at is that no one
+knows how to conform his air and manners with his
+appearance, nor his style and words with his thoughts
+and sentiments, that every one forgets himself and how
+far he is insensibly removed from the truth. Nearly
+every one falls into this fault in some way. No one
+has an ear sufficiently fine to mark perfectly this kind
+of cadence.
+
+Thousands of people with good qualities are dis-
+pleasing; thousands pleasing with far less abilities,
+and why? Because the first wish to appear to be what
+they are not, the second are what they appear.
+
+Some of the advantages or disadvantages that we
+have received from nature please in proportion as
+we know the air, the style, the manner, the senti-
+ments that coincide with our condition and our
+appearance, and displease in the proportion they are
+removed from that point.
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+THE LETTER R PRECEDING A REFERENCE REFERS TO THE REFLECTIONS,
+THE ROMAN NUMERALS REFER TO THE SUPPLEMENTS.
+
+
+Ability, 162, 165, 199, 245, 283, 288. SEE Cleverness
+-------, Sovereign, 244.
+Absence, 276.
+Accent, country, 342, XCIV.
+Accidents, 59, 310.
+Acquaintances, 426. SEE FRIENDS.
+Acknowledgements, 225.
+Actions, 1, 7, 57, 58, 160, 161, 382, 409, CXX.
+Actors, 256.
+Admiration, 178, 294, 474.
+Adroitness of mind, R.2.
+Adversity, 25.
+--------- of Friends, XV.
+Advice, 110, 116, 283, 378, CXVII.
+Affairs, 453, R 2.
+Affectation, 134, 493.
+Affections, 232.
+Afflictions, 233, 355, 362, 493, XCVII, XV.
+Age, 222, 405, LXXIII. SEE Old Age.
+Agreeableness, 255, R.5.
+Agreement, 240.
+Air, 399, 495, R.7.
+--- Of a Citizen, 393.
+Ambition, 24, 91, 246, 293, 490.
+Anger, XXX.
+Application, 41, 243.
+Appearances, 64, 166, 199, 256, 302, 431, 457, R.7.
+-----------, Conformity of Manners with, R.7.
+Applause, 272.
+Approbation, 51, 280.
+Artifices, 117, 124, 125, 126, R.2.
+Astonishment, 384.
+Avarice, 167, 491, 492.
+
+Ballads, 211.
+Beauty, 240, 474, 497, LI.
+------ of the Mind, R.2.
+Bel esprit defined, R.2.
+Benefits, 14, 298, 299, 301, CXXII.
+Benefactors, 96, 317, CXXII.
+Blame, CVIII.
+Blindness, XIX.
+Boasting, 141, 307.
+Boredom, 141, 304, 352. SEE Ennui.
+Bouts rimés, 382, CXX.
+Bravery, 1, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 219, 220, 221, 365,
+ 504. SEE Courage and Valour.
+Brilliancy of Mind, R.2.
+Brilliant things, LII.
+
+Capacity, 375.
+Caprice, 45.
+Chance, 57, 344, XCV. SEE Fortune.
+Character, LVI, R.2.
+Chastity, 1. SEE Virtue of Women.
+Cheating, 114, 127.
+Circumstances, 59, 470.
+Civility, 260.
+Clemency, 15, 16.
+Cleverness, 162, 269, 245, 399.
+Coarseness, 372.
+Comedy, 211, R.3.
+Compassion, 463. SEE Pity.
+Complaisance, 481, R.4.
+Conduct, 163, 227, 378, CXVII.
+Confidants, whom we make, R.1.
+Confidence, 239, 365, 475, XLIX, R.1, R.4.
+Confidence, difference from Sincerity
+----------, defined, R.1.
+Consolation, 325.
+Constancy, 19, 20, 21, 175, 176, 420.
+Contempt, 322.
+-------- of Death, 504.
+Contentment, LXXX.
+Contradictions, 478.
+Conversation, 139, 140, 142, 312, 313, 314, 364, 391,
+ 421, CIV, R.5.
+Copies, 133.
+Coquetry, 241. SEE Flirtation.
+Country Manner, 393.
+------- Accent, 342.
+Courage, 1, 214, 215, 216, 219, 221, XLII. SEE Bravery.
+Covetousness, opposed to Reason, 469
+Cowardice, 215, 480.
+Cowards, 370.
+Crimes, 183, 465, XXXV, XXXVII.
+Cunning, 126, 129, 394, 407.
+Curiosity, 173.
+
+Danger, XLII.
+Death, 21, 23, 26.
+-----, Contempt of, 504.
+Deceit, 86, 117, 118, 124, 127, 129, 395, 434. SEE ALSO
+ Self-Deceit.
+Deception, CXXI.
+Decency, 447.
+Defects, 31, 90, 493, LXXII. SEE Faults.
+Delicacy, 128, R.2.
+Dependency, result of Confidence, R.1.
+Designs, 160, 161.
+Desires, 439, 469, LXXXII, LXXXV.
+Despicable Persons, 322.
+Detail, Mind given to, R.2.
+Details, 41, 106.
+Devotion, 427.
+Devotees, 427.
+Devout, LXXVI.
+Differences, 135.
+Dignities, R.7.
+Discretion, R.5.
+Disguise, 119, 246, 282.
+Disgrace, 235, 412.
+Dishonour, 326, LXIX.
+Distrust, 84, 86, 335.
+Divination, 425.
+Doubt, 348.
+Docility, R.4.
+Dupes, 87, 102.
+
+Education, 261.
+Elevation, 399, 400, 403.
+Eloquence, 8, 249, 250.
+Employments, 164, 419, 449.
+Enemies, 114, 397, 458, 463.
+Ennui, 122, 141, 304, 312, 352, CXII, R.2.
+Envy, 27, 28, 280, 281, 328, 376, 433, 476, 486.
+Epithets assigned to the Mind, R.2.
+Esteem, 296.
+Establish, 56, 280.
+Evils, 121, 197, 269, 454, 464, XCIII.
+Example, 230.
+Exchange of secrets, R.1.
+Experience, 405.
+Expedients, 287.
+Expression, refined, R.5.
+
+Faculties of the Mind, 174.
+Failings, 397, 403.
+Falseness, R.6.
+---------, disguised, 282.
+---------, kinds of, R.6.
+Familiarity, R,4.
+Fame, 157.
+Farces, men compared to, 211.
+Faults, 37, 112, 155, 184, 190, 194, 196, 251, 354, 365,
+ 372, 397, 403, 411, 428, 493, 494, V, LXV, CX,
+ CXV.
+Favourites, 55.
+Fear, 370, LXVIII.
+Feeling, 255.
+Ferocity, XXXIII.
+Fickleness, 179, 181, 498.
+Fidelity, 247.
+--------, hardest test of, R.1.
+-------- in love, 331, 381, C.
+Figure and air, R.7.
+Firmness, 19, 479.
+Flattery, 123, 144, 152, 198, 320, 329.
+Flirts, 406, 418.
+Flirtation, 107, 241, 277, 332, 334, 349, 376, LXIV.
+Follies, 156, 300, 408, 416.
+Folly, 207, 208, 209, 210, 231, 300, 310, 311, 318,
+ XXIV.
+Fools, 140, 210, 309, 318, 357, 414, 451, 456,
+-----, old, 444.
+-----, witty, 451, 456.
+Force of Mind, 30, 42,
+, 237.
+Forgetfulness, XXVI.
+Forgiveness, 330.
+Fortitude, 19. SEE Bravery.
+Fortune, 1, 17, 45, 52, 53, 58, 60, 61, 154, 212, 227, 323,
+ 343, 380, 391, 392, 399, 403, 435, 449, IX., CXIX.
+Friends, 84, 114, 179, 235, 279, 315, 319, 428.
+-------, adversity of, XV.
+-------, disgrace of, 235.
+-------, faults of, 428.
+-------, true ones, LXXXVI.
+Friendship, 80, 81, 83, 376, 410, 427, 440, 441, 473,
+ XXII, CXXIV.
+----------, defined, 83.
+----------, women do not care for, 440.
+----------, rarer than love, 473.
+Funerals, XXXVIII.
+
+Gallantry, 100. SEE Flirtation.
+--------- of mind, 100.
+Generosity, 246.
+Genius, R.2.
+Gentleness, R.6.
+Ghosts, 76.
+Gifts of the mind, R.2.
+Glory, 157, 198, 221, 268.
+Good, 121, 185, 229, 238, 303, XCIII.
+----, how to be, XLVII.
+Goodness, 237, 275, 284, XLVI.
+Good grace, 67, R.7.
+Good man, who is a, 206.
+God nature, 481.
+Good qualities, 29, 90, 337, 365, 397, 462.
+Good sense, 67, 347, CVI.
+Good taste, 258.
+----------, rarity of, R.3.
+----, women, 368, XCVI.
+Government of others, 151.
+Grace, 67.
+Gracefulness, 240.
+Gratitude, 223, 224, 225, 279, 298, 438, XLIII.
+Gravity, 257.
+Great men, what they cannot acquire, LXXXIV.
+Great minds, 142.
+Great names, 94.
+Greediness, 66.
+
+Habit, 426.
+Happy, who are, 49.
+Happiness, 48, 61, VII, LXXX, LXXXI.
+hatred, 338.
+Head, 102, 108.
+Health, 188, LVII.
+Heart, 98, 102, 103, 108, 478, 484.
+Heroes, 24, 53, 185.
+Honesty, 202, 206.
+Honour, 270.
+Hope, 168, LXVIII.
+Humility, 254, 358, LXXVI, LXXIX
+Humiliation, 272.
+Humour, 47. SEE Temper.
+Hypocrisy, 218.
+--------- of afflictions, 233.
+
+Idleness, 169, 266, 267, 398, 482, 487, XVIII., LV.
+Ills, 174. SEE Evils.
+Illusions, 123.
+Imagination, 478.
+Imitation, 230, XLIV, R.5.
+Impertinence, 502.
+Impossibilities, 30.
+Incapacity, 126.
+Inclination, 253, 390.
+Inconsistency, 135.
+Inconstancy, 181.
+Inconvenience, 242.
+Indifference, 172, XXIII.
+Indiscretion, 429.
+Indolence. SEE Idleness, and Laziness.
+Infidelity, 359, 360, 381, 429.
+Ingratitude, 96, 226, 306, 317.
+Injuries, 14.
+Injustice, 78.
+Innocence, 465.
+Instinct, 123.
+Integrity, 170.
+Interest, 39, 40, 66, 85, 172, 187, 232, 253, 305, 390.
+Interests, 66.
+Intrepidity, 217, XL.
+Intrigue, 73.
+Invention, 287.
+
+Jealousy, 28, 32, 324, 336, 359, 361, 446, 503, CII.
+Joy, XIV.
+Judges, 268.
+Judgment, 89, 97, 248.
+-------- of the World, 212, 455.
+Justice, 78, 458, XII.
+
+Kindness, 14, 85.
+Knowledge, 106.
+
+Labour of Body, effect of, LXXVII.
+Laments, 355.
+Laziness, 367. SEE Idleness.
+Leader, 43.
+Levity, 179, 181.
+Liberality, 167, 263.
+Liberty in Society, R.4.
+Limits to Confidence, R.1.
+Little Minds, 142.
+Love, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 136, 259, 262,
+ 274, 286, 296, 321, 335, 336, 348, 349, 351, 353,
+ 361, 371, 374, 385, 395, 396, 402, 417, 418, 422,
+ 430, 440, 441, 459, 466, 471, 473, 499, 500, 501,
+ x, XI, XIII, LVIII, LX, LXII, LXXXVIII,
+ XCIX, CIII, CXXI.
+---- defined, 68.
+----, Coldness in, LX.
+----, Effect of absence on, 276.
+---- akin to Hate, 111.
+---- of Women, 466, 471, 499.
+----, Novelty in, 274.
+----, Infidelity in, LXIV.
+----, Old age of, 430.
+----, Cure for, 417, 459.
+Loss of Friends, XLV.
+Lovers, 312, 362, LXXXVII, XCVII.
+Lunatic, 353.
+Luxury, LIV.
+Lying, 63.
+
+Madmen, 353, 414.
+Malady, LVII.
+Magistrates, R.6.
+Magnanimity, 248, LIII.
+----------- defined, 285.
+Malice, 483.
+Manners, R.7.
+Mankind, 436, XXXVI.
+Marriages, 113.
+Maxims, LXVII.
+Mediocrity, 375.
+Memory, 89, 313.
+Men easier to know than Man, 436.
+Merit, 50, 92, 95, 153, 156, 165, 166, 273, 291, 379,
+ 401, 437, 455, CXVIII.
+Mind, 101, 103, 265, 357, 448, 482, CIX.
+Mind, Capacities of, R.2.
+Miserable, 49.
+Misfortunes, 19, 24, 174, 325.
+----------- of Friends. XV.
+----------- of Enemies, 463.
+Mistaken people, 386.
+Mistrust, 86.
+Mockery, R.2.
+Moderation, 17, 18, 293, 308, III, IV.
+Money, Man compared to, XXXII.
+Motives, 409.
+
+Names, Great, 94.
+Natural goodness, 275.
+Natural, to be, 431.
+-------, always pleasing, R.7.
+Nature, 53, 153, 189, 365, 404.
+Negotiations, 278.
+Novelty in study, 178.
+------- in love, 274.
+------- in friendship, 426.
+
+Obligations, 299, 317, 438. SEE Benefits and Gratitude.
+Obstinacy, 234, 424.
+--------- its cause, 265.
+Occasions. SEE Opportunities.
+Old Age, 109, 210, 418, 423, 430, 461.
+Old Men, 93.
+Openness of heart, R.1.
+Opinions, 13, 234, CXXIII, R.5.
+Opinionatedness, R.5.
+Opportunities, 345, 453, CV.
+
+Passions, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 122, 188, 266, 276, 404,
+ 422, 443, 460, 471, 477, 484, 485, 486, 500, II.
+Peace of Mind, VIII.
+Penetration, 377, 425, CXVI.
+Perfection, R.2.
+Perseverance, 177.
+Perspective, 104.
+Persuasion, 8.
+Philosophers, 46, 54, 504, XXI.
+Philosophy, 22.
+---------- of a Footman, 504, LXXV.
+Pity, 264.
+Pleasing, 413, CXXV.
+--------, Mode of, XLVIII, R.5.
+--------, Mind a, R.2.
+Point of view, R.4.
+Politeness, 372, R.5.
+Politeness of Mind, 99.
+Praise, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 272, 356,
+ 432, XXVII, CVII.
+Preoccupation, 92, R.3.
+Pride, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 228, 234, 239, 254, 267, 281,
+ 450, 462, 463, 472, VI, XIX.
+Princes, 15, 320.
+Proceedings, 170.
+Productions of the Mind, R.2.
+Professions, 256.
+Promises, 38.
+Proportion, R.6.
+Propriety, 447.
+--------- in Women, XXXIV.
+Prosperity, 25.
+Providence, XXXIX.
+Prudence, 65, LXXXVIII, R.1.
+
+Qualities, 29, 162, 397, 470, 498, R.6, R.7.
+---------, Bad, 468.
+---------, Good, 88, 337, 462.
+---------, Great, 159, 433.
+---------, of Mind, classified, R.20.
+Quarrels, 496,
+Quoting oneself, R.5.
+
+Raillery, R.2, R.4.
+Rank, 401.
+Reason, 42, 105, 325, 365, 467, 469, XX, R.6.
+Recollection in Memory{, 313}.
+Reconciliation, 82.
+Refinement, R.2.
+Regret, 355.
+Relapses, 193.
+Remedies, 288.
+-------- for love 459.
+Remonstrances, 37.
+Repentance, 180.
+Repose, 268.
+Reproaches, 148.
+Reputation, 268, 412.
+Resolution, L.
+Revenge, 14.
+Riches, 54.
+Ridicule, 133, 134, 326, 418, 422.
+Rules for Conversation, R.5.
+Rusticity, 393.
+
+Satire, 483, R.2, R.4.
+Sciences, R.6.
+Secrets, XVI, R.1.
+-------, How they should be kept, R.1.
+Self-deceit, 115, 452.
+Self-love, 2, 3, 4, 228, 236, 247, 261, 262, 339, 494, 500,
+ I, XVII, XXVIII, XXXIII, LXVI, LXXIV.
+--------- in love, 262.
+Self-satisfaction, 51.
+Sensibility, 275.
+Sensible People, 347, CVI.
+Sentiment, 255, R.6.
+Severity of Women, 204, 333.
+Shame, 213, 220.
+Silence, 79, 137, 138, CXIV.
+Silliness. SEE Folly.
+Simplicity, 289.
+Sincerity, 62, 316, 366, 383, 457.
+---------, Difference between it and Confidence, R.1.
+---------, defined, R.1.
+--------- of Lovers, LXI.
+Skill, LXIV.
+Sobriety, XXV.
+Society, 87, 201, R.4.
+-------, Distinction between it and Friendship, R.IV.
+Soul, 80, 188, 194.
+Souls, Great, XXXI.
+Sorrows, LXXVIII.
+Stages of Life, 405.
+Strength of mind, 19, 20, 21, 504.
+Studies, why new ones are pleasing, 178.
+-------, what to study, XCII.
+Subtilty, 128.
+Sun, 26.
+
+Talents, 468.
+-------, latent, 344, XCV.
+Talkativeness, 314.
+Taste, 13, 109, 252, 390, 467, CXX, R.3, R.6.
+-----, good, 258, R.3.
+-----, cause of diversities in, R.3.
+-----, false, R.3.
+Tears, 233, 373.
+Temper, 47, 290, 292.
+Temperament, 220, 222, 297, 346.
+Times for speaking, R.5.
+Timidity, 169, 480.
+Titles, XXXII.
+Tranquillity, 488.
+Treachery, 120, 126.
+Treason, 120.
+Trickery, 86, 350, XCI. SEE Deceit.
+Trifles, 41.
+Truth, 64, LI.
+Tyranny, R.1.
+
+Understanding, 89.
+Untruth, 63. SEE Lying.
+Unhappy, CXXV.
+
+Valour, 1, 213, 214, 215, 216. SEE Bravery and Courage.
+Vanity, 137, 158, 200, 232, 388, 389, 443, 467, 483.
+Variety of mind, R.4.
+Vice, 182, 186, 187, 189, 191, 192, 195, 218, 253, 273,
+ 380, 442, 445, XXIX.
+Violence, 363, 369, 466, CXIII.
+Victory, XII.
+Virtue, 1, 25, 169, 171, 182, 186, 187, 189, 200, 218,
+ 253, 380, 388, 442, 445, 489, XXIX.
+Virtue of Women, 1, 220, 367, XCVIII.
+Vivacity, 416.
+
+Weakness, 130, 445.
+Wealth, Contempt of, 301.
+Weariness. SEE Ennui.
+Wicked people, 284.
+Wife jealous sometimes desirable, LXXXIX.
+Will, 30.
+Wisdom, 132, 210, 231, 323, {4}44, LXXXIII.
+Wise Man, who is a, 203, XCI.
+Wishes, 295.
+Wit, 199, 340, 413, 415, 421, 502.
+Wives, 364, CIV.
+Woman, 131, 204, 205, 220, 241, 277, 332, 333, 334,
+ 340, 346, 362, 367, 368, 418, 429, 440, 466, 471,
+ 474, LXX, XC.
+Women, Severity of, 333.
+-----, Virtue of, 205, 220, XC.
+-----, Power of, LXXI.
+Wonder, 384.
+World, 201.
+-----, Judgment of, 268.
+-----, Approbation of, 201.
+-----, Establishment in, 56.
+-----, Praise and censure of, 454.
+
+Young men, 378, 495.
+Youth, 271, 341.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences
+and Moral Maxims, by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORAL MAXIMS ***
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>Reflections; or Sentences and Moral Maxims</title>
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+
+<h2>Maxims of Duc De La Rochefoucauld</h2>
+
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+Title: Reflections; Or Sentences and Moral Maxims
+
+Author: Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+Release Date: October, 2005 [EBook #9105]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on September 8, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORAL MAXIMS ***
+
+
+
+This html version was produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+{TRANSCRIBERS NOTES: spelling variants are preserved (e.g.
+labour instead of labor, criticise instead of criticize, etc.);
+the translators' comments are in square brackets [...] as
+they are inthe text; footnotes are indicated by * and appear
+immediately following the passage containing the note (in the
+text they appear at the bottom of the page); and, finally,
+corrections and addenda are in curly brackets {...}.}
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center>
+<h1>ROCHEFOUCAULD</h1>
+</center>
+<br><br>
+<p>"As Rochefoucauld his maxims drew From Nature&mdash;I believe
+them true. They argue no corrupted mind In him; the fault is in
+mankind."&mdash;Swift.</p>
+
+<p>"Les Maximes de la Rochefoucauld sont des proverbs des gens
+d'esprit."&mdash;Montesquieu.</p>
+
+<p>"Maxims are the condensed good sense of nations."&mdash;Sir J.
+Mackintosh.</p>
+
+<p>"Translators should not work alone; for good <i>Et Propria Verba</i>
+do not always occur to one mind."&mdash;Luther's <i>Table Talk</i>,
+iii.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center>
+<h1>Reflections;<br>
+or Sentences and Moral Maxims</h1>
+
+<h3>By</h3>
+
+<h2>Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld, Prince de Marsillac.</h2>
+</center>
+
+
+<br><br><br>
+<center>
+<h4>Translated from the Editions of 1678 and 1827 with
+introduction, notes, and some account of the author and his
+times.</h4>
+<h4>By</h4>
+
+<h4>J. W. Willis Bund, M.A. LL.B and J. Hain Friswell</h4>
+
+<h4>Simpson Low, Son<a href="#"></a>, and Marston, 188, Fleet Street. 1871.</h4>
+</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<table summary="contents">
+<tr><td>
+<h3>
+<a href="#preface">Preface (translator's)</a><br>
+<a href="#introduction">Introduction (translator's)</a><br>
+<a href="#maxims">Reflections and Moral Maxims</a><br>
+<a href="#sup1">First Supplement</a><br>
+<a href="#sup2">Second Supplement</a><br>
+<a href="#sup3">Third Supplement</a><br>
+<a href="#reflect">Reflections on Various Subjects</a><br>
+<a href="#index">Index</a><br>
+</h3>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<h2><a name="preface">Preface.</a></h2> {Translators'}<br>
+
+<p>Some apology must be made for an attempt "to translate the
+untranslatable." Notwithstanding there are no less than eight
+English translations of La Rochefoucauld, hardly any are
+readable, none are free from faults, and all fail more or less to
+convey the author's meaning. Though so often translated, there is
+not a complete English edition of the Maxims and Reflections. All
+the translations are confined exclusively to the Maxims, none
+include the Reflections. This may be accounted for, from the fact
+that most of the translations are taken from the old editions of
+the Maxims, in which the Reflections do not appear. Until M.
+Suard devoted his attention to the text of Rochefoucauld, the
+various editions were but reprints of the preceding ones, without
+any regard to the alterations made by the author in the later
+editions published during his life-time. So much was this the
+case, that Maxims which had been rejected by Rochefoucauld in his
+last edition, were still retained in the body of the work. To
+give but one example, the celebrated Maxim as to the misfortunes
+of our friends, was omitted in the last edition of the book,
+published in Rochefoucauld's life-time, yet in every English
+edition this Maxim appears in the body of the work.</p>
+
+<p>M. Aim&eacute; Martin in 1827 published an edition of the
+Maxims and Reflections which has ever since been the standard
+text of Rochefoucauld in France. The Maxims are printed from the
+edition of 1678, the last published during the author's life, and
+the last which received his corrections. To this edition were
+added two Supplements; the first containing the Maxims which had
+appeared in the editions of 1665, 1666, and 1675, and which were
+afterwards omitted; the second, some additional Maxims found
+among various of the author's manuscripts in the Royal Library at
+Paris. And a Series of Reflections which had been previously
+published in a work called "Receuil de pi&egrave;ces d'histoire
+et de litt&eacute;rature." Paris, 1731. They were first
+published with the Maxims in an edition by Gabriel Brotier.</p>
+
+<p>In an edition of Rochefoucauld entitled "Reflexions, ou
+Sentences et Maximes Morales, augment&eacute;es de plus deux cent
+nouvelles Maximes et Maximes et Pens&eacute;es diverses suivant
+les copies Imprim&eacute;es &agrave; Paris, chez Claude Barbin,
+et Matre Cramoisy 1692,"* some fifty Maxims were added, ascribed
+by the editor to Rochefoucauld, and as his family allowed them to
+be published under his name, it seems probable they were genuine.
+These fifty form the third supplement to this book.</p>
+
+<blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>*In all the French editions this book is spoken of as
+published in 1693. The only copy I have seen is in the Cambridge
+University Library, 47, 16, 81, and is called "Reflexions
+Morales."</p></blockquote></blockquote>
+
+<p>The apology for the present edition of Rochefoucauld must
+therefore be twofold: firstly, that it is an attempt to give the
+public a complete English edition of Rochefoucauld's works as a
+moralist. The body of the work comprises the Maxims as the author
+finally left them, the first supplement, those published in
+former editions, and rejected by the author in the later; the
+second, the unpublished Maxims taken from the author's
+correspondence and manuscripts, and the third, the Maxims first
+published in 1692. While the Reflections, in which the thoughts
+in the Maxims are extended and elaborated, now appear in English
+for the first time. And secondly, that it is an attempt (to quote
+the preface of the edition of 1749) "to do the Duc de la
+Rochefoucauld the justice to make him speak English."</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<h2><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></h2> {Translators'}<br>
+
+
+<p>The description of the "ancien regime" in France, "a despotism
+tempered by epigrams," like most epigrammatic sentences, contains
+some truth, with much fiction. The society of the last half of
+the seventeenth, and the whole of the eighteenth centuries, was
+doubtless greatly influenced by the precise and terse mode in
+which the popular writers of that date expressed their thoughts.
+To a people naturally inclined to think that every possible view,
+every conceivable argument, upon a question is included in a
+short aphorism, a shrug, and the word "voil&agrave;," truths
+expressed in condensed sentences must always have a peculiar
+charm. It is, perhaps, from this love of epigram, that we find so
+many eminent French writers of maxims. Pascal, De Retz, La
+Rochefoucauld, La Bruy&egrave;re, Montesquieu, and Vauvenargues,
+each contributed to the rich stock of French epigrams. No other
+country can show such a list of brilliant writers&mdash;in
+England certainly we cannot. Our most celebrated, Lord Bacon,
+has, by his other works, so surpassed his maxims, that their fame
+is, to a great measure, obscured. The only Englishman who could
+have rivalled La Rochefoucauld or La Bruy&egrave;re was the Earl
+of Chesterfield, and he only could have done so from his very
+intimate connexion with France; but unfortunately his brilliant
+genius was spent in the impossible task of trying to refine a
+boorish young Briton, in "cutting blocks with a razor."</p>
+
+<p>Of all the French epigrammatic writers La Rochefoucauld is at
+once the most widely known, and the most distinguished. Voltaire,
+whose opinion on the century of Louis XIV. is entitled to the
+greatest weight, says, "One of the works that most largely
+contributed to form the taste of the nation, and to diffuse a
+spirit of justice and precision, is the collection of maxims, by
+Francois Duc de la Rochefoucauld."</p>
+
+<p>This Francois, the second Duc de la Rochefoucauld, Prince de
+Marsillac, the author of the maxims, was one of the most
+illustrious members of the most illustrious families among the
+French noblesse. Descended from the ancient Dukes of Guienne, the
+founder of the Family Fulk or Foucauld, a younger branch of the
+House of Lusignan, was at the commencement of the eleventh
+century the Seigneur of a small town, La Roche, in the Angounois.
+Our chief knowledge of this feudal lord is drawn from the monkish
+chronicles. As the benefactor of the various abbeys and
+monasteries in his province, he is naturally spoken of by them in
+terms of eulogy, and in the charter of one of the abbeys of
+Angouleme he is called, "vir nobilissimus Fulcaldus." His
+territorial power enabled him to adopt what was then, as is still
+in Scotland, a common custom, to prefix the name of his estate to
+his surname, and thus to create and transmit to his descendants
+the illustrious surname of La Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p>From that time until that great crisis in the history of the
+French aristocracy, the Revolution of 1789, the family of La
+Rochefoucauld have been, "if not first, in the very first line"
+of that most illustrious body. One Seigneur served under Philip
+Augustus against Richard Coeur de Lion, and was made prisoner at
+the battle of Gisors. The eighth Seigneur Guy performed a great
+tilt at Bordeaux, attended (according to Froissart) to the Lists
+by some two hundred of his kindred and relations. The sixteenth
+Seigneur Francais was chamberlain to Charles VIII. and Louis
+XII., and stood at the font as sponsor, giving his name to that
+last light of French chivalry, Francis I. In 1515 he was created
+a baron, and was afterwards advanced to a count, on account of
+his great service to Francis and his predecessors.</p>
+
+<p>The second count pushed the family fortune still further by
+obtaining a patent as the Prince de Marsillac. His widow, Anne de
+Polignac, entertained Charles V. at the family chateau at
+Verteuil, in so princely a manner that on leaving Charles
+observed, "He had never entered a house so redolent of high
+virtue, uprightness, and lordliness as that mansion."</p>
+
+<p>The third count, after serving with distinction under the Duke
+of Guise against the Spaniards, was made prisoner at St. Quintin,
+and only regained his liberty to fall a victim to the "bloody
+infamy" of St. Bartholomew. His son, the fourth count, saved with
+difficulty from that massacre, after serving with distinction in
+the religious wars, was taken prisoner in a skirmish at St. Yriex
+la Perche, and murdered by the Leaguers in cold blood.</p>
+
+<p>The fifth count, one of the ministers of Louis XIII., after
+fighting against the English and Buckingham at the Ile de
+R&eacute;, was created a duke. His son Francis, the second duke,
+by his writings has made the family name a household word.</p>
+
+<p>The third duke fought in many of the earlier campaigns of
+Louis XIV. at Torcy, Lille, Cambray, and was dangerously wounded
+at the passage of the Rhine. From his bravery he rose to high
+favour at Court, and was appointed Master of the Horse (Grand
+Veneur) and Lord Chamberlain. His son, the fourth duke, commanded
+the regiment of Navarre, and took part in storming the village of
+Neerwinden on the day when William III. was defeated at Landen.
+He was afterwards created Duc de la Rochequyon and Marquis de
+Liancourt.</p>
+
+<p>The fifth duke, banished from Court by Louis XV., became the
+friend of the philosopher Voltaire.</p>
+
+<p>The sixth duke, the friend of Condorcet, was the last of the
+long line of noble lords who bore that distinguished name. In
+those terrible days of September, 1792, when the French people
+were proclaiming universal humanity, the duke was seized as an
+aristocrat by the mob at Gisors and put to death behind his own
+carriage, in which sat his mother and his wife, at the very place
+where, some six centuries previously, his ancestor had been taken
+prisoner in a fair fight. A modern writer has spoken of this
+murder "as an admirable reprisal upon the grandson for the
+writings and conduct of the grandfather." But M. Sainte Beuve
+observes as to this, he can see nothing admirable in the death of
+the duke, and if it proves anything, it is only that the
+grandfather was not so wrong in his judgment of men as is usually
+supposed.</p>
+
+<p>Francis, the author, was born on the 15th December 1615. M.
+Sainte Beuve divides his life into four periods, first, from his
+birth till he was thirty-five, when he became mixed up in the war
+of the Fronde; the second period, during the progress of that
+war; the third, the twelve years that followed, while he
+recovered from his wounds, and wrote his maxims during his
+retirement from society; and the last from that time till his
+death.</p>
+
+<p>In the same way that Herodotus calls each book of his history
+by the name of one of the muses, so each of these four periods of
+La Rochefoucauld's life may be associated with the name of a
+woman who was for the time his ruling passion. These four ladies
+are the Duchesse de Chevreuse, the Duchesse de Longueville,
+Madame de Sabl&eacute;, and Madame de La Fayette.</p>
+
+<p>La Rochefoucauld's early education was neglected; his father,
+occupied in the affairs of state, either had not, or did not
+devote any time to his education. His natural talents and his
+habits of observation soon, however, supplied all deficiencies.
+By birth and station placed in the best society of the French
+Court, he soon became a most finished courtier. Knowing how
+precarious Court favour then was, his father, when young
+Rochefoucauld was only nine years old, sent him into the army. He
+was subsequently attached to the regiment of Auvergne. Though but
+sixteen he was present, and took part in the military operations
+at the siege of Cassel. The Court of Louis XIII. was then ruled
+imperiously by Richelieu. The Duke de la Rochefoucauld was
+strongly opposed to the Cardinal's party. By joining in the plots
+of Gaston of Orleans, he gave Richelieu an opportunity of ridding
+Paris of his opposition. When those plots were discovered, the
+Duke was sent into a sort of banishment to Blois. His son, who
+was then at Court with him, was, upon the pretext of a liaison
+with Mdlle. d'Hautefort, one of the ladies in waiting on the
+Queen (Anne of Austria), but in reality to prevent the Duke
+learning what was passing at Paris, sent with his father. The
+result of the exile was Rochefoucauld's marriage. With the
+exception that his wife's name was Mdlle. Vivonne, and that she
+was the mother of five sons and three daughters, nothing is known
+of her. While Rochefoucauld and his father were at Blois, the
+Duchesse de Chevreuse, one of the beauties of the Court, and the
+mistress of Louis, was banished to Tours. She and Rochefoucauld
+met, and soon became intimate, and for a time she was destined to
+be the one motive of his actions. The Duchesse was engaged in a
+correspondence with the Court of Spain and the Queen. Into this
+plot Rochefoucauld threw himself with all his energy; his
+connexion with the Queen brought him back to his old love Mdlle.
+d'Hautefort, and led him to her party, which he afterwards
+followed. The course he took shut him off from all chance of
+Court favour. The King regarded him with coldness, the Cardinal
+with irritation. Although the Bastile and the scaffold, the fate
+of Chalais and Montmorency, were before his eyes, they failed to
+deter him from plotting. He was about twenty-three; returning to
+Paris, he warmly sided with the Queen. He says in his Memoirs
+that the only persons she could then trust were himself and
+Mdlle. d'Hautefort, and it was proposed he should take both of
+them from Paris to Brussels. Into this plan he entered with all
+his youthful indiscretion, it being for several reasons the very
+one he would wish to adopt, as it would strengthen his influence
+with Anne of Austria, place Richelieu and his master in an
+uncomfortable position, and save Mdlle. d'Hautefort from the
+attentions the King was showing her.</p>
+
+<p>But Richelieu of course discovered this plot, and
+Rochefoucauld was, of course, sent to the Bastile. He was
+liberated after a week's imprisonment, but banished to his
+chateau at Verteuil.</p>
+
+<p>The reason for this clemency was that the Cardinal desired to
+win Rochefoucauld from the Queen's party. A command in the army
+was offered to him, but by the Queen's orders refused.</p>
+
+<p>For some three years Rochefoucauld remained at Verteuil,
+waiting the time for his reckoning with Richelieu; speculating on
+the King's death, and the favours he would then receive from the
+Queen. During this period he was more or less engaged in plotting
+against his enemy the Cardinal, and hatching treason with Cinq
+Mars and De Thou.</p>
+
+<p>M. Sainte Beuve says, that unless we study this first part of
+Rochefoucauld's life, we shall never understand his maxims. The
+bitter disappointment of the passionate love, the high hopes then
+formed, the deceit and treachery then witnessed, furnished the
+real key to their meaning. The cutting cynicism of the morality
+was built on the ruins of that chivalrous ambition and romantic
+affection. He saw his friend Cinq Mars sent to the scaffold,
+himself betrayed by men whom he had trusted, and the only reason
+he could assign for these actions was intense selfishness.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Richelieu died. Rochefoucauld returned to Court,
+and found Anne of Austria regent, and Mazarin minister. The
+Queen's former friends flocked there in numbers, expecting that
+now their time of prosperity had come. They were bitterly
+disappointed. Mazarin relied on hope instead of gratitude, to
+keep the Queen's adherents on his side. The most that any
+received were promises that were never performed. In after years,
+doubtless, Rochefoucauld's recollection of his disappointment led
+him to write the maxim: "We promise according to our hopes, we
+perform according to our fears." But he was not even to receive
+promises; he asked for the Governorship of Havre, which was then
+vacant. He was flatly refused. Disappointment gave rise to anger,
+and uniting with his old flame, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, who
+had received the same treatment, and with the Duke of Beaufort,
+they formed a conspiracy against the government. The plot was, of
+course, discovered and crushed. Beaufort was arrested, the
+Duchesse banished. Irritated and disgusted, Rochefoucauld went
+with the Duc d'Enghein, who was then joining the army, on a
+campaign, and here he found the one love of his life, the Duke's
+sister, Mdme. de Longueville. This lady, young, beautiful, and
+accomplished, obtained a great ascendancy over Rochefoucauld, and
+was the cause of his taking the side of Cond&eacute; in the
+subsequent civil war. Rochefoucauld did not stay long with the
+army. He was badly wounded at the siege of Mardik, and returned
+from thence to Paris. On recovering from his wounds, the war of
+the Fronde broke out. This war is said to have been most
+ridiculous, as being carried on without a definite object, a
+plan, or a leader. But this description is hardly correct; it was
+the struggle of the French nobility against the rule of the
+Court; an attempt, the final attempt, to recover their lost
+influence over the state, and to save themselves from sinking
+under the rule of cardinals and priests.</p>
+
+<p>With the general history of that war we have nothing to do; it
+is far too complicated and too confused to be stated here. The
+memoirs of Rochefoucauld and De Retz will give the details to
+those who desire to trace the contests of the factions&mdash;the
+course of the intrigues. We may confine ourselves to its progress
+so far as it relates to the Duc de la Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p>On the Cardinal causing the Princes de Cond&eacute; and Conti,
+and the Duc de Longueville, to be arrested, Rochefoucauld and the
+Duchess fled into Normandy. Leaving her at Dieppe, he went into
+Poitou, of which province he had some years previously bought the
+post of governor. He was there joined by the Duc de Bouillon, and
+he and the Duke marched to, and occupied Bordeaux. Cardinal
+Mazarin and Marechal de la Meilleraie advanced in force on
+Bordeaux, and attacked the town. A bloody battle followed.
+Rochefoucauld defended the town with the greatest bravery, and
+repulsed the Cardinal. Notwithstanding the repulse, the burghers
+of Bordeaux were anxious to make peace, and save the city from
+destruction. The Parliament of Bordeaux compelled Rochefoucauld
+to surrender. He did so, and returned nominally to Poitou, but in
+reality in secret to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>There he found the Queen engaged in trying to maintain her
+position by playing off the rival parties of the Prince
+Cond&eacute; and the Cardinal De Retz against each other.
+Rochefoucauld eagerly espoused his old party&mdash;that of
+Cond&eacute;. In August, 1651, the contending parties met in the
+Hall of the Parliament of Paris, and it was with great difficulty
+they were prevented from coming to blows even there. It is even
+said that Rochefoucauld had ordered his followers to murder De
+Retz.</p>
+
+<p>Rochefoucauld was soon to undergo a bitter disappointment.
+While occupied with party strife and faction in Paris, Madame de
+Chevreuse left him, and formed an alliance with the Duc de
+Nemours. Rochefoucauld still loved her. It was, probably,
+thinking of this that he afterwards wrote, "Jealousy is born with
+love, but does not die with it." He endeavoured to get Madame de
+Chatillon, the old mistress of the Duc de Nemours, reinstated in
+favour, but in this he did not succeed. The Duc de Nemours was
+soon after killed in a duel. The war went on, and after several
+indecisive skirmishes, the decisive battle was fought at Paris,
+in the Faubourg St. Antoine, where the Parisians first learnt the
+use or the abuse of their favourite defence, the barricade. In
+this battle, Rochefoucauld behaved with great bravery. He was
+wounded in the head, a wound which for a time deprived him of his
+sight. Before he recovered, the war was over, Louis XIV. had
+attained his majority, the gold of Mazarin, the arms of Turenne,
+had been successful, the French nobility were vanquished, the
+court supremacy established.</p>
+
+<p>This completed Rochefoucauld's active life.</p>
+
+<p>When he recovered his health, he devoted himself to society.
+Madame de Sabl&eacute; assumed a hold over him. He lived a quiet
+life, and occupied himself in composing an account of his early
+life, called his "Memoirs," and his immortal "Maxims."</p>
+
+<p>From the time he ceased to take part in public life,
+Rochefoucauld's real glory began. Having acted the various parts
+of soldier, politician, and lover with but small success, he now
+commenced the part of moralist, by which he is known to the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>Living in the most brilliant society that France possessed,
+famous from his writings, distinguished from the part he had
+taken in public affairs, he formed the centre of one of those
+remarkable French literary societies, a society which numbered
+among its members La Fontaine, Racine, Boileau. Among his most
+attached friends was Madame de La Fayette (the authoress of the
+"Princess of Cleeves"), and this friendship continued until his
+death. He was not, however, destined to pass away in that gay
+society without some troubles. At the passage of the Rhine in
+1672 two of his sons were engaged; the one was killed, the other
+severely wounded. Rochefoucauld was much affected by this, but
+perhaps still more by the death of the young Duc de Longueville,
+who perished on the same occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Sainte Beuve says that the cynical book and that young life
+were the only fruits of the war of the Fronde. Madame de
+S&eacute;vign&eacute;, who was with him when he heard the news of
+the death of so much that was dear to him, says, "I saw his heart
+laid bare on that cruel occasion, and his courage, his merit, his
+tenderness, and good sense surpassed all I ever met with. I hold
+his wit and accomplishments as nothing in comparison." The
+combined effect of his wounds and the gout caused the last years
+of Rochefoucauld's life to be spent in great pain. Madame de
+S&eacute;vign&eacute;, who was {with} him continually during his
+last illness, speaks of the fortitude with which he bore his
+sufferings as something to be admired. Writing to her daughter,
+she says, "Believe me, it is not for nothing he has moralised all
+his life; he has thought so often on his last moments that they
+are nothing new or unfamiliar to him."</p>
+
+<p>In his last illness, the great moralist was attended by the
+great divine, Bossuet. Whether that matchless eloquence or his
+own philosophic calm had, in spite of his writings, brought him
+into the state Madame de S&eacute;vign&eacute; describes, we know
+not; but one, or both, contributed to his passing away in a
+manner that did not disgrace a French noble or a French
+philosopher. On the 11th March, 1680, he ended his stormy life in
+peace after so much strife, a loyal subject after so much
+treason.</p>
+
+<p>One of his friends, Madame Deshouli&egrave;res, shortly before
+he died sent him an ode on death, which aptly describes his
+state&mdash; "Oui, soyez alors plus ferme, Que ces vulgaires
+humains Qui, pr&egrave;s de leur dernier terme, De vaines
+terreurs sont pleins. En sage que rien n'offense, Livrez-vous
+sans resistance A d'in&eacute;vitables traits; Et, d'une demarche
+&eacute;gale, Passez cette onde fatal Qu'on ne repasse
+jamais."</p>
+
+<p>Rochefoucauld left behind him only two works, the one, Memoirs
+of his own time, the other the Maxims. The first described the
+scenes in which his youth had been spent, and though written in a
+lively style, and giving faithful pictures of the intrigues and
+the scandals of the court during Louis XIV.'s minority, yet,
+except to the historian, has ceased at the present day to be of
+much interest. It forms, perhaps, the true key to understand the
+special as opposed to general application of the maxims.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the assertion of Bayle, that "there are few
+people so bigoted to antiquity as not to prefer the Memoirs of La
+Rochefoucauld to the Commentaries of Caesar," or the statement of
+Voltaire, "that the Memoirs are universally read and the Maxims
+are learnt by heart," few persons at the present day ever heard
+of the Memoirs, and the knowledge of most as to the Maxims is
+confined to that most celebrated of all, though omitted from his
+last edition, "There is something in the misfortunes of our best
+friends which does not wholly displease us." Yet it is difficult
+to assign a cause for this; no book is perhaps oftener
+unwittingly quoted, none certainly oftener unblushingly pillaged;
+upon none have so many contradictory opinions been given.</p>
+
+<p>"Few books," says Mr. Hallam, "have been more highly extolled,
+or more severely blamed, than the maxims of the Duke of
+Rochefoucauld, and that not only here, but also in France."
+Rousseau speaks of it as, "a sad and melancholy book," though he
+goes on to say "it is usually so in youth when we do not like
+seeing man as he is." Voltaire says of it, in the words above
+quoted, "One of the works which most contributed to form the
+taste of the (French) nation, and to give it a spirit of justness
+and precision, was the collection of the maxims of Francois Duc
+de la Rochefoucauld, though there is scarcely more than one truth
+running through the book&mdash;that &lsquo;self-love is the
+motive of everything'&mdash;yet this thought is presented under
+so many varied aspects that it is nearly always striking. It is
+not so much a book as it is materials for ornamenting a book.
+This little collection was read with avidity, it taught people to
+think, and to comprise their thoughts in a lively, precise, and
+delicate turn of expression. This was a merit which, before him,
+no one in Europe had attained since the revival of letters."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Johnson speaks of it as "the only book written by a man of
+fashion, of which professed authors need be jealous."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Chesterfield, in his letters to his son, says, "Till you
+come to know mankind by your experience, I know no thing nor no
+man that can in the meantime bring you so well acquainted with
+them as Le Duc de la Rochefoucauld. His little book of maxims,
+which I would advise you to look into for some moments at least
+every day of your life, is, I fear, too like and too exact a
+picture of human nature. I own it seems to degrade it, but yet my
+experience does not convince me that it degrades it
+unjustly."</p>
+
+<p>Bishop Butler, on the other hand, blames the book in no
+measured terms. "There is a strange affectation," says the
+bishop, "in some people of explaining away all particular
+affection, and representing the whole life as nothing but one
+continued exercise of self-love. Hence arise that surprising
+confusion and perplexity in the Epicureans of old, Hobbes, the
+author of 'Reflexions Morales,' and the whole set of writers, of
+calling actions interested which are done of the most manifest
+known interest, merely for the gratification of a present
+passion."</p>
+
+<p>The judgment the reader will be most inclined to adopt will
+perhaps be either that of Mr. Hallam, "Concise and energetic in
+expression, reduced to those short aphorisms which leave much to
+the reader's acuteness and yet save his labour, not often
+obscure, and never wearisome, an evident generalisation of long
+experience, without pedantry, without method, without deductive
+reasonings, yet wearing an appearance at least of profundity;
+they delight the intelligent though indolent man of the world,
+and must be read with some admiration by the philosopher . . . .
+yet they bear witness to the contracted observation and the
+precipitate inferences which an intercourse with a single class
+of society scarcely fails to generate." Or that of Addison, who
+speaks of Rochefoucauld "as the great philosopher for
+administering consolation to the idle, the curious, and the
+worthless part of mankind."</p>
+
+<p>We are fortunately in possession of materials such as rarely
+exist to enable us to form a judgment of Rochefoucauld's
+character. We have, with a vanity that could only exist in a
+Frenchman, a description or portrait of himself, of his own
+painting, and one of those inimitable living sketches in which
+his great enemy, Cardinal De Retz, makes all the chief actors in
+the court of the regency of Anne of Austria pass across the stage
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>We will first look on the portrait Rochefoucauld has left us
+of himself: "I am," says he, "of a medium height, active, and
+well-proportioned. My complexion dark, but uniform, a high
+forehead; and of moderate height, black eyes, small, deep set,
+eyebrows black and thick but well placed. I am rather embarrassed
+in talking of my nose, for it is neither flat nor aquiline, nor
+large; nor pointed: but I believe, as far as I can say, it is too
+large than too small, and comes down just a trifle too low. I
+have a large mouth, lips generally red enough, neither shaped
+well nor badly. I have white teeth, and fairly even. I have been
+told I have a little too much chin. I have just looked at myself
+in the glass to ascertain the fact, and I do not know how to
+decide. As to the shape of my face, it is either square or oval,
+but which I should find it very difficult to say. I have black
+hair, which curls by nature, and thick and long enough to entitle
+me to lay claim to a fine head. I have in my countenance somewhat
+of grief and pride, which gives many people an idea I despise
+them, although I am not at all given to do so. My gestures are
+very free, rather inclined to be too much so, for in speaking
+they make me use too much action. Such, candidly, I believe I am
+in outward appearance, and I believe it will be found that what I
+have said above of myself is not far from the real case. I shall
+use the same truthfulness in the remainder of my picture, for I
+have studied myself sufficiently to know myself well; and I will
+lack neither boldness to speak as freely as I can of my good
+qualities, nor sincerity to freely avow that I have faults.</p>
+
+<p>"In the first place, to speak of my temper. I am melancholy,
+and I have hardly been seen for the last three or four years to
+laugh above three or four times. It seems to me that my
+melancholy would be even endurable and pleasant if I had none but
+what belonged to me constitutionally; but it arises from so many
+other causes, fills my imagination in such a way, and possesses
+my mind so strongly that for the greater part of my time I remain
+without speaking a word, or give no meaning to what I say. I am
+extremely reserved to those I do not know, and I am not very open
+with the greater part of those I do. It is a fault I know well,
+and I should neglect no means to correct myself of it; but as a
+certain gloomy air I have tends to make me seem more reserved
+than I am in fact, and as it is not in our power to rid ourselves
+of a bad expression that arises from a natural conformation of
+features, I think that even when I have cured myself internally,
+externally some bad expression will always remain.</p>
+
+<p>"I have ability. I have no hesitation in saying it, as for
+what purpose should I pretend otherwise. So great circumvention,
+and so great depreciation, in speaking of the gifts one has,
+seems to me to hide a little vanity under an apparent modesty,
+and craftily to try to make others believe in greater virtues
+than are imputed to us. On my part I am content not to be
+considered better-looking than I am, nor of a better temper than
+I describe, nor more witty and clever than I am. Once more, I
+have ability, but a mind spoilt by melancholy, for though I know
+my own language tolerably well, and have a good memory, a mode of
+thought not particularly confused, I yet have so great a mixture
+of discontent that I often say what I have to say very badly.</p>
+
+<p>"The conversation of gentlemen is one of the pleasures that
+most amuses me. I like it to be serious and morality to form the
+substance of it. Yet I also know how to enjoy it when trifling;
+and if I do not make many witty speeches, it is not because I do
+not appreciate the value of trifles well said, and that I do not
+find great amusement in that manner of raillery in which certain
+prompt and ready-witted persons excel so well. I write well in
+prose; I do well in verse; and if I was envious of the glory that
+springs from that quarter, I think with a little labour I could
+acquire some reputation. I like reading, in general; but that in
+which one finds something to polish the wit and strengthen the
+soul is what I like best. But, above all, I have the greatest
+pleasure in reading with an intelligent person, for then we
+reflect constantly upon what we read, and the observations we
+make form the most pleasant and useful form of conversation there
+is.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a fair critic of the works in verse and prose that are
+shown me; but perhaps I speak my opinion with almost too great
+freedom. Another fault in me is that I have sometimes a spirit of
+delicacy far too scrupulous, and a spirit of criticism far too
+severe. I do not dislike an argument, and I often of my own free
+will engage in one; but I generally back my opinion with too much
+warmth, and sometimes, when the wrong side is advocated against
+me, from the strength of my zeal for reason, I become a little
+unreasonable myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have virtuous sentiments, good inclinations, and so strong
+a desire to be a wholly good man that my friend cannot afford me
+a greater pleasure than candidly to show me my faults. Those who
+know me most intimately, and those who have the goodness
+sometimes to give me the above advice, know that I always receive
+it with all the joy that could be expected, and with all
+reverence of mind that could be desired.</p>
+
+<p>"I have all the passions pretty mildly, and pretty well under
+control. I am hardly ever seen in a rage, and I never hated any
+one. I am not, however, incapable of avenging myself if I have
+been offended, or if my honour demanded I should resent an insult
+put upon me; on the contrary, I feel clear that duty would so
+well discharge the office of hatred in me that I should follow my
+revenge with even greater keenness than other people.</p>
+
+<p>"Ambition does not weary me. I fear but few things, and I do
+not fear death in the least. I am but little given to pity, and I
+could wish I was not so at all. Though there is nothing I would
+not do to comfort an afflicted person, and I really believe that
+one should do all one can to show great sympathy to him for his
+misfortune, for miserable people are so foolish that this does
+them the greatest good in the world; yet I also hold that we
+should be content with expressing sympathy, and carefully avoid
+having any. It is a passion that is wholly worthless in a
+well-regulated mind, which only serves to weaken the heart, and
+which should be left to ordinary persons, who, as they never do
+anything from reason, have need of passions to stimulate their
+actions.</p>
+
+<p>"I love my friends; and I love them to such an extent that I
+would not for a moment weigh my interest against theirs. I
+condescend to them, I patiently endure their bad temper. But,
+also, I do not make much of their caresses, and I do not feel
+great uneasiness in their absence.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally, I have but little curiosity about the majority of
+things that stir up curiosity in other men. I am very secret, and
+I have less difficulty than most men in holding my tongue as to
+what is told me in confidence. I am most particular as to my
+word, and I would never fail, whatever might be the consequence,
+to do what I had promised; and I have made this an inflexible law
+during the whole of my life.</p>
+
+<p>"I keep the most punctilious civility to women. I do not
+believe I have ever said anything before them which could cause
+them annoyance. When their intellect is cultivated, I prefer
+their society to that of men: one there finds a mildness one does
+not meet with among ourselves, and it seems to me beyond this
+that they express themselves with more neatness, and give a more
+agreeable turn to the things they talk about. As for flirtation,
+I formerly indulged in a little, now I shall do so no more,
+though I am still young. I have renounced all flirtation, and I
+am simply astonished that there are still so many sensible people
+who can occupy their time with it.</p>
+
+<p>"I wholly approve of real loves; they indicate greatness of
+soul, and although, in the uneasiness they give rise to, there is
+a something contrary to strict wisdom, they fit in so well with
+the most severe virtue, that I believe they cannot be censured
+with justice. To me who have known all that is fine and grand in
+the lofty aspirations of love, if I ever fall in love, it will
+assuredly be in love of that nature. But in accordance with the
+present turn of my mind, I do not believe that the knowledge I
+have of it will ever change from my mind to my heart."</p>
+
+<p>Such is his own description of himself. Let us now turn to the
+other picture, delineated by the man who was his bitterest enemy,
+and whom (we say it with regret) Rochefoucauld tried to
+murder.</p>
+
+<p>Cardinal De Retz thus paints him:&mdash; "In M. de la
+Rochefoucauld there was ever an indescribable something. From his
+infancy he always wanted to be mixed up with plots, at a time
+when he could not understand even the smallest interests (which
+has indeed never been his weak point,) or comprehend greater
+ones, which in another sense has never been his strong point. He
+was never fitted for any matter, and I really cannot tell the
+reason. His glance was not sufficiently wide, and he could not
+take in at once all that lay in his sight, but his good sense,
+perfect in theories, combined with his gentleness, his winning
+ways, his pleasing manners, which are perfect, should more than
+compensate for his lack of penetration. He always had a natural
+irresoluteness, but I cannot say to what this irresolution is to
+be attributed. It could not arise in him from the wealth of his
+imagination, for that was anything but lively. I cannot put it
+down to the barrenness of his judgment, for, although he was not
+prompt in action, he had a good store of reason. We see the
+effects of this irresolution, although we cannot assign a cause
+for it. He was never a general, though a great soldier; never,
+naturally, a good courtier, although he had always a good idea of
+being so. He was never a good partizan, although all his life
+engaged in intrigues. That air of pride and timidity which your
+see in his private life, is turned in business into an apologetic
+manner. He always believed he had need of it; and this, combined
+with his &lsquo;Maxims,' which show little faith in virtue, and
+his habitual custom, to give up matters with the same haste he
+undertook them, leads me to the conclusion that he would have
+done far better to have known his own mind, and have passed
+himself off, as he could have done, for the most polished
+courtier, the most agreeable man in private life that had
+appeared in his century."</p>
+
+<p>It is but justice to the Cardinal to say, that the Duc is not
+painted in such dark colours as we should have expected, judging
+from what we know of the character of De Retz. With his
+marvellous power of depicting character, a power unrivalled,
+except by St. Simon and perhaps by Lord Clarendon, we should have
+expected the malignity of the priest would have stamped the
+features of his great enemy with the impress of infamy, and not
+have simply made him appear a courtier, weak, insincere, and
+nothing more. Though rather beyond our subject, the character of
+Cardinal de Retz, as delineated by Mdme. S&eacute;vign&eacute;,
+in one of her letters, will help us to form a true conclusion on
+the different characters of the Duc and the Cardinal. She
+says:&mdash; "Paul de Gondi Cardinal de Retz possesses great
+elevation of character, a certain extent of intellect, and more
+of the ostentation than of the true greatness of courage. He has
+an extraordinary memory, more energy than polish in his words, an
+easy humour, docility of character, and weakness in submitting to
+the complaints and reproaches of his friends, a little piety,
+some appearances of religion. He appears ambitious without being
+really so. Vanity and those who have guided him, have made him
+undertake great things, almost all opposed to his profession. He
+excited the greatest troubles in the State without any design of
+turning them to account, and far from declaring himself the enemy
+of Cardinal Mazarin with any view of occupying his place, he
+thought of nothing but making himself an object of dread to him,
+and flattering himself with the false vanity of being his rival.
+He was clever enough, however, to take advantage of the public
+calamities to get himself made Cardinal. He endured his
+imprisonment with firmness, and owed his liberty solely to his
+own daring. In the obscurity of a life of wandering and
+concealment, his indolence for many years supported him with
+reputation. He preserved the Archbishopric of Paris against the
+power of Cardinal Mazarin, but after the death of that minister,
+he resigned it without knowing what he was doing, and without
+making use of the opportunity to promote the interests of himself
+and his friends. He has taken part in several conclaves, and his
+conduct has always increased his reputation.</p>
+
+<p>"His natural bent is to indolence, nevertheless he labours
+with activity in pressing business, and reposes with indifference
+when it is concluded. He has great presence of mind, and knows so
+well how to turn it to his own advantage on all occasions
+presented him by fortune, that it would seem as if he had
+foreseen and desired them. He loves to narrate, and seeks to
+dazzle all his listeners indifferently by his extraordinary
+adventures, and his imagination often supplies him with more than
+his memory. The generality of his qualities are false, and what
+has most contributed to his reputation is his power of throwing a
+good light on his faults. He is insensible alike to hatred and to
+friendship, whatever pains he may be at to appear taken up with
+the one or the other. He is incapable of envy or avarice, whether
+from virtue or from carelessness. He has borrowed more from his
+friends than a private person could ever hope to be able to
+repay; he has felt the vanity of acquiring so much on credit, and
+of undertaking to discharge it. He has neither taste nor
+refinement; he is amused by everything and pleased by nothing. He
+avoids difficult matters with considerable address, not allowing
+people to penetrate the slight acquaintance he has with
+everything. The retreat he has just made from the world is the
+most brilliant and the most unreal action of his life; it is a
+sacrifice he has made to his pride under the pretence of
+devotion; he quits the court to which he cannot attach himself,
+and retires from a world which is retiring from him."</p>
+
+<p>The Maxims were first published in 1665, with a preface by
+Segrais. This preface was omitted in the subsequent editions. The
+first edition contained 316 maxims, counting the last upon death,
+which was not numbered. The second in 1666 contained only 102;
+the third in 1671, and the fourth in 1675, 413. In this last
+edition we first meet with the introductory maxim, "Our virtues
+are generally but disguised vices." The edition of 1678, the
+fifth, increased the number to 504. This was the last edition
+revised by the author, and published in his lifetime. The text of
+that edition has been used for the present translation. The next
+edition, the sixth, was published in 1693, about thirteen years
+after the author's death. This edition included fifty new maxims,
+attributed by the editor to Rochefoucauld. Most likely they were
+his writing, as the fact was never denied by his family, through
+whose permission they were published. They form the third
+supplement to the translation. This sixth edition was published
+by Claude Barbin, and the French editions since that time have
+been too numerous to be enumerated. The great popularity of the
+Maxims is perhaps best shown from the numerous translations that
+have been made of them. No less than eight English translations,
+or so-called translations, have appeared; one American, a
+Swedish, and a Spanish translation, an Italian imitation, with
+parallel passages, and an English imitation by Hazlitt. The
+titles of the English editions are as follows:&mdash; i. Seneca
+Unmasked. By Mrs. Aphara Behn. London, 1689. She calls the
+author the Duke of Rushfucave. ii. Moral Maxims and Reflections,
+in four parts. By the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Now made English.
+London, 1694. 12 mo. iii. Moral Maxims and Reflections of the
+Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Newly made English. London, 1706. 12
+mo. iv. Moral Maxims of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Translated
+from the French. With notes. London, 1749. 12 mo. v. Maxims and
+Moral Reflections of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. Revised and
+improved. London, 1775. 8 vo. vi. Maxims and Moral Reflections of
+the Duke de la Rochefoucauld. A new edition, revised and im-
+proved, by L. D. London, 1781. 8 vo. vii. The Gentleman's
+Library. La Rochefoucauld's Maxims and Moral Reflections. London,
+1813. 12 mo. viii.Moral Reflections, Sentences, and Maxims of the
+Duke de la Rochefoucauld, newly translated from the French; with
+an introduction and notes. London, 1850. 16 mo. ix. Maxims and
+Moral Reflections of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld: with a Memoir
+by the Chevalier de Chatelain. London, 1868. 12 mo.</p>
+
+<p>The perusal of the Maxims will suggest to every reader to a
+greater or less degree, in accordance with the extent of his
+reading, parallel passages, and similar ideas. Of ancient writers
+Rochefoucauld most strongly reminds us of Tacitus; of modern
+writers, Junius most strongly reminds us of Rochefoucauld. Some
+examples from both are given in the notes to this translation. It
+is curious to see how the expressions of the bitterest writer of
+English political satire to a great extent express the same ideas
+as the great French satirist of private life. Had space permitted
+the parallel could have been drawn very closely, and much of the
+invective of Junius traced to its source in Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p>One of the persons whom Rochefoucauld patronised and
+protected, was the great French fabulist, La Fontaine. This
+patronage was repaid by La Fontaine giving, in one of his fables,
+"L'Homme et son Image," an elaborate defence of his patron. After
+there depicting a man who fancied himself one of the most lovely
+in the world, and who complained he always found all mirrors
+untrustworthy, at last discovered his real image reflected in the
+water. He thus applies his fable:&mdash; "Je parle &agrave; tous:
+et cette erreur extr&ecirc;me, Est un mal que chacun se plait
+d'entretenir, Notre &acirc;me, c'est cet homme amoureux de lui
+m&ecirc;me, Tant de miroirs, ce sont les sottises d'autrui.
+Miroirs, de nos d&eacute;fauts les peintres l&eacute;gitimes, Et
+quant au canal, c'est celui Qui chacun sait, le livre des
+MAXIMES."</p>
+
+<p>It is just this: the book is a mirror in which we all see
+ourselves. This has made it so unpopular. It is too true. We
+dislike to be told of our faults, while we only like to be told
+of our neighbour's. Notwithstanding Rousseau's assertion, it is
+young men, who, before they know their own faults and only know
+their neighbours', that read and thoroughly appreciate
+Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p>After so many varied opinions he then pleases us more and
+seems far truer than he is in reality, it is impossible to give
+any general conclusion of such distinguished writers on the
+subject. Each reader will form his own opinion of the merits of
+the author and his book. To some, both will seem deserving of the
+highest praise; to others both will seem deserving of the highest
+censure. The truest judgment as to the author will be found in
+the remarks of a countryman of his own, as to the book in the
+remarks of a countryman of ours.</p>
+
+<p>As to the author, M. Sainte Beuve says:&mdash;"C'&eacute;tait
+un misanthrope poli, insinuant, souriant, qui
+pr&eacute;c&eacute;dait de bien peu et pr&eacute;parait avec
+charme l'autre MISANTHROPE."</p>
+
+<p>As to the book, Mr. Hallam says:&mdash;"Among the books in
+ancient and modern times which record the conclusions of
+observing men on the moral qualities of their fellows, a high
+place should be reserved for the Maxims of Rochefoucauld".</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="maxims"></a>
+<br>
+
+<center>
+<h2>REFLECTIONS;<br>
+OR, SENTENCES AND MORAL MAXIMS</h2>
+
+<h4>Our virtues are most frequently but vices disguised.</h4>
+</center>
+<p>[This epigraph which is the key to the system of La
+Rochefoucauld, is found in another form as No. 179 of the maxims
+of the first edition, 1665, it is omitted from the 2nd and 3rd,
+and reappears for the first time in the 4th edition, in 1675, as
+at present, at the head of the Reflections.&mdash;<i>Aim&eacute;
+Martin.</i> Its best answer is arrived at by reversing the predicate
+and the subject, and you at once form a contradictory maxim
+equally true, our vices are most frequently but virtues
+disguised.]</p>
+<a name="1"></a><br>
+<p>1.&mdash;What we term virtue is often but a mass of various
+actions and divers interests, which fortune, or our own industry,
+manage to arrange; and it is not always from valour or from
+chastity that men are brave, and women chaste.</p>
+
+<p>"Who combats bravely is not therefore brave, He dreads a
+death-bed like the meanest slave; Who reasons wisely is not
+therefore wise, His pride in reasoning, not in acting, lies."
+Pope, <i>Moral Essays</i>, Ep. i. line 115.</p>
+<a name="2"></a><br>
+<p>2.&mdash;Self-love is the greatest of flatterers.</p>
+<a name="3"></a><br>
+<p>3.&mdash;Whatever discoveries have been made in the region of
+self-love, there remain many unexplored territories there.</p>
+
+<p>[This is the first hint of the system the author tries to
+develope. He wishes to find in vice a motive for all our actions,
+but this does not suffice him; he is obliged to call other
+passions to the help of his system and to confound pride, vanity,
+interest and egotism with self love. This confusion destroys the
+unity of his principle.&mdash;<i>Aim&eacute; Martin</i>.]</p>
+<a name="4"></a><br>
+<p>4.&mdash;Self love is more cunning than the most cunning man
+in the world.</p>
+<a name="5"></a><br>
+<p>5.&mdash;The duration of our passions is no more dependant
+upon us than the duration of our life. [Then what becomes of free
+will?&mdash;<i>Aim&eacute;</i>; <i>Martin</i>]</p>
+<a name="6"></a><br>
+<p>6.&mdash;Passion often renders the most clever man a fool, and
+even sometimes renders the most foolish man clever.</p>
+<a name="7"></a><br>
+<p>7.&mdash;Great and striking actions which dazzle the eyes are
+represented by politicians as the effect of great designs,
+instead of which they are commonly caused by the temper and the
+passions. Thus the war between Augustus and Anthony, which is set
+down to the ambition they entertained of making themselves
+masters of the world, was probably but an effect of jealousy.</p>
+<a name="8"></a><br>
+<p>8.&mdash;The passions are the only advocates which always
+persuade. They are a natural art, the rules of which are
+infallible; and the simplest man with passion will be more
+persuasive than the most eloquent without.</p>
+
+<p>[See Maxim 249 which is an illustration of this.]</p>
+<a name="9"></a><br>
+<p>9.&mdash;The passions possess a certain injustice and self
+interest which makes it dangerous to follow them, and in reality
+we should distrust them even when they appear most
+trustworthy.</p>
+<a name="10"></a><br>
+<p>10.&mdash;In the human heart there is a perpetual generation
+of passions; so that the ruin of one is almost always the
+foundation of another.</p>
+<a name="11"></a><br>
+<p>11.&mdash;Passions often produce their contraries: avarice
+sometimes leads to prodigality, and prodigality to avarice; we
+are often obstinate through weakness and daring though
+timidity.</p>
+<a name="12"></a><br>
+<p>12.&mdash;Whatever care we take to conceal our passions under
+the appearances of piety and honour, they are always to be seen
+through these veils.</p>
+
+<p>[The 1st edition, 1665, preserves the image perhaps
+better&mdash;"however we may conceal our passions under the veil,
+etc., there is always some place where they peep out."]</p>
+<a name="13"></a><br>
+<p>13.&mdash;Our self love endures more impatiently the
+condemnation of our tastes than of our opinions.</p>
+<a name="14"></a><br>
+<p>14.&mdash;Men are not only prone to forget benefits and
+injuries; they even hate those who have obliged them, and cease
+to hate those who have injured them. The necessity of revenging
+an injury or of recompensing a benefit seems a slavery to which
+they are unwilling to submit.</p>
+<a name="15"></a><br>
+<p>15.&mdash;The clemency of Princes is often but policy to win
+the affections of the people.</p>
+<a name="16"></a><br>
+<p>["So many are the advantages which monarchs gain by clemency,
+so greatly does it raise their fame and endear them to their
+subjects, that it is generally happy for them to have an
+opportunity of displaying it."&mdash;Montesquieu, <i>Esprit Des
+Lois, Lib. VI., C. 21.</i>]</p>
+<a name="16"></a><br>
+<p>16.&mdash;This clemency of which they make a merit, arises
+oftentimes from vanity, sometimes from idleness, oftentimes from
+fear, and almost always from all three combined.</p>
+
+<p>[La Rochefoucauld is content to paint the age in which he
+lived. Here the clemency spoken of is nothing more than an
+expression of the policy of Anne of Austria. Rochefoucauld had
+sacrificed all to her; even the favour of Cardinal Richelieu, but
+when she became regent she bestowed her favours upon those she
+hated; her friends were forgotten.&mdash;<i>Aim&eacute; Martin</i>. The
+reader will hereby see that the age in which the writer lived
+best interprets his maxims.]</p>
+<a name="17"></a><br>
+<p>17.&mdash;The moderation of those who are happy arises from
+the calm which good fortune bestows upon their temper.</p>
+<a name="18"></a><br>
+<p>18.&mdash;Moderation is caused by the fear of exciting the
+envy and contempt which those merit who are intoxicated with
+their good fortune; it is a vain display of our strength of mind,
+and in short the moderation of men at their greatest height is
+only a desire to appear greater than their fortune.</p>
+<a name="19"></a><br>
+<p>19.&mdash;We have all sufficient strength to support the
+misfortunes of others.</p>
+
+<p>[The strongest example of this is the passage in Lucretius,
+lib. ii., line I:&mdash; "Suave mari magno turbantibus aequora
+ventis E terra magnum alterius spectare laborem."]</p>
+<a name="20"></a><br>
+<p>20.&mdash;The constancy of the wise is only the talent of
+concealing the agitation of their hearts.</p>
+
+<p>[Thus wisdom is only hypocrisy, says a commentator. This
+definition of constancy is a result of maxim 18.]</p>
+<a name="21"></a><br>
+<p>21.&mdash;Those who are condemned to death affect sometimes a
+constancy and contempt for death which is only the fear of facing
+it; so that one may say that this constancy and contempt are to
+their mind what the bandage is to their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>[See this thought elaborated in maxim 504.]</p>
+<a name="22"></a><br>
+<p>22.&mdash;Philosophy triumphs easily over past evils and
+future evils; but present evils triumph over it.</p>
+<a name="23"></a><br>
+<p>23.&mdash;Few people know death, we only endure it, usually
+from determination, and even from stupidity and custom; and most
+men only die because they know not how to prevent dying.</p>
+<a name="24"></a><br>
+<p>24.&mdash;When great men permit themselves to be cast down by
+the continuance of misfortune, they show us that they were only
+sustained by ambition, and not by their mind; so that PLUS a
+great vanity, heroes are made like other men.</p>
+
+<p>[Both these maxims have been rewritten and made conciser by
+the author; the variations are not worth quoting.]</p>
+<a name="25"></a><br>
+<p>25.&mdash;We need greater virtues to sustain good than evil
+fortune.</p>
+
+<p>["Prosperity do{th} best discover vice, but adversity do{th}
+best discover virtue."&mdash;Lord Bacon, <i>Essays</i>{, (1625), "Of
+Adversity"}.]</p>
+
+<p>{The quotation wrongly had "does" for "doth".}</p>
+<a name="26"></a><br>
+<p>26.&mdash;Neither the sun nor death can be looked at without
+winking.</p>
+<a name="27"></a><br>
+<p>27.&mdash;People are often vain of their passions, even of the
+worst, but envy is a passion so timid and shame-faced that no one
+ever dare avow her.</p>
+<a name="28"></a><br>
+<p>28.&mdash;Jealousy is in a manner just and reasonable, as it
+tends to preserve a good which belongs, or which we believe
+belongs to us, on the other hand envy is a fury which cannot
+endure the happiness of others.</p>
+<a name="29"></a><br>
+<p>29.&mdash;The evil that we do does not attract to us so much
+persecution and hatred as our good qualities.</p>
+<a name="30"></a><br>
+<p>30.&mdash;We have more strength than will; and it is often
+merely for an excuse we say things are impossible.</p>
+<a name="31"></a><br>
+<p>31.&mdash;If we had no faults we should not take so much
+pleasure in noting those of others.</p>
+<a name="32"></a><br>
+<p>32.&mdash;Jealousy lives upon doubt; and comes to an end or
+becomes a fury as soon as it passes from doubt to certainty.</p>
+<a name="33"></a><br>
+<p>33.&mdash;Pride indemnifies itself and loses nothing even when
+it casts away vanity.</p>
+
+<p>[See maxim 450, where the author states, what we take from our
+other faults we add to our pride.]</p>
+<a name="34"></a><br>
+<p>34.&mdash;If we had no pride we should not complain of that of
+others.</p>
+
+<p>["The proud are ever most provoked by pride."&mdash;Cowper,
+<i>Conversation</i> 160.]</p>
+<a name="35"></a><br>
+<p>35.&mdash;Pride is much the same in all men, the only
+difference is the method and manner of showing it.</p>
+
+<p>["Pride bestowed on all a common friend."&mdash;Pope, <i>Essay On
+Man, Ep.</i> ii., line 273.]</p>
+<a name="36"></a><br>
+<p>36.&mdash;It would seem that nature, which has so wisely
+ordered the organs of our body for our happiness, has also given
+us pride to spare us the mortification of knowing our
+imperfections.</p>
+<a name="37"></a><br>
+<p>37.&mdash;Pride has a larger part than goodness in our
+remonstrances with those who commit faults, and we reprove them
+not so much to correct as to persuade them that we ourselves are
+free from faults.</p>
+<a name="38"></a><br>
+<p>38.&mdash;We promise according to our hopes; we perform
+according to our fears.</p>
+
+<p>["The reason why the Cardinal (Mazarin) deferred so long to
+grant the favours he had promised, was because he was persuaded
+that hope was much more capable of keeping men to their duty than
+gratitude."&mdash;<i>Fragments Historiques. Racine.</i>]</p>
+<a name="39"></a><br>
+<p>39.&mdash;Interest speaks all sorts of tongues and plays all
+sorts of characters; even that of disinterestedness.</p>
+<a name="40"></a><br>
+<p>40.&mdash;Interest blinds some and makes some see.</p>
+<a name="41"></a><br>
+<p>41.&mdash;Those who apply themselves too closely to little
+things often become incapable of great things.</p>
+<a name="42"></a><br>
+<p>42.&mdash;We have not enough strength to follow all our
+reason.</p>
+<a name="43"></a><br>
+<p>43.&mdash;A man often believes himself leader when he is led;
+as his mind endeavours to reach one goal, his heart insensibly
+drags him towards another.</p>
+<a name="44"></a><br>
+<p>44.&mdash;Strength and weakness of mind are mis-named; they are
+really only the good or happy arrangement of our bodily
+organs.</p>
+<a name="45"></a><br>
+<p>45.&mdash;The caprice of our temper is even more whimsical
+than that of Fortune.</p>
+<a name="46"></a><br>
+<p>46.&mdash;The attachment or indifference which philosophers
+have shown to life is only the style of their self love, about
+which we can no more dispute than of that of the palate or of the
+choice of colours.</p>
+<a name="47"></a><br>
+<p>47.&mdash;Our temper sets a price upon every gift that we
+receive from fortune.</p>
+<a name="48"></a><br>
+<p>48.&mdash;Happiness is in the taste, and not in the things
+themselves; we are happy from possessing what we like, not from
+possessing what others like.</p>
+<a name="49"></a><br>
+<p>49.&mdash;We are never so happy or so unhappy as we
+suppose.</p>
+<a name="50"></a><br>
+<p>50.&mdash;Those who think they have merit persuade themselves
+that they are honoured by being unhappy, in order to persuade
+others and themselves that they are worthy to be the butt of
+fortune.</p>
+<a name="51"></a><br>
+<p>["Ambition has been so strong as to make very miserable men
+take comfort that they were supreme in misery; and certain it
+is{, that where} we cannot distinguish ourselves by something
+excellent, we begin to take a complacency in some singular
+infirmities, follies, or defects of one kind or other."
+&mdash;Burke, {<i>On The Sublime And Beautiful,</i> (1756), Part I,
+Sect. XVII}.]</p>
+
+<p>{The translators' incorrectly cite <i>Speech On Conciliation With
+America.</i> Also, Burke does not actually write "Ambition has
+been...", he writes "It has been..." when speaking of
+ambition.}</p>
+<a name="51"></a><br>
+<p>51.&mdash;Nothing should so much diminish the satisfaction
+which we feel with ourselves as seeing that we disapprove at one
+time of that which we approve of at another.</p>
+<a name="52"></a><br>
+<p>52.&mdash;Whatever difference there appears in our fortunes,
+there is nevertheless a certain compensation of good and evil
+which renders them equal.</p>
+<a name="53"></a><br>
+<p>53.&mdash;Whatever great advantages nature may give, it is not
+she alone, but fortune also that makes the hero.</p>
+<a name="54"></a><br>
+<p>54.&mdash;The contempt of riches in philosophers was only a
+hidden desire to avenge their merit upon the injustice of
+fortune, by despising the very goods of which fortune had
+deprived them; it was a secret to guard themselves against the
+degradation of poverty, it was a back way by which to arrive at
+that distinction which they could not gain by riches.</p>
+
+<p>["It is always easy as well as agreeable for the inferior
+ranks of mankind to claim merit from the contempt of that pomp
+and pleasure which fortune has placed beyond their reach. The
+virtue of the primitive Christians, like that of the first
+Romans, was very frequently guarded by poverty and
+ignorance."&mdash;Gibbon, <i>Decline And Fall, Chap. 15</i>.]</p>
+<a name="55"></a><br>
+<p>55.&mdash;The hate of favourites is only a love of favour. The
+envy of NOT possessing it, consoles and softens its regrets by
+the contempt it evinces for those who possess it, and we refuse
+them our homage, not being able to detract from them what
+attracts that of the rest of the world.</p>
+<a name="56"></a><br>
+<p>56.&mdash;To establish ourselves in the world we do everything
+to appear as if we were established.</p>
+<a name="57"></a><br>
+<p>57.&mdash;Although men flatter themselves with their great
+actions, they are not so often the result of a great design as of
+chance.</p>
+<a name="58"></a><br>
+<p>58.&mdash;It would seem that our actions have lucky or unlucky
+stars to which they owe a great part of the blame or praise which
+is given them.</p>
+<a name="59"></a><br>
+<p>59.&mdash;There are no accidents so unfortunate from which
+skilful men will not draw some advantage, nor so fortunate that
+foolish men will not turn them to their hurt.</p>
+<a name="60"></a><br>
+<p>60.&mdash;Fortune turns all things to the advantage of those
+on whom she smiles.</p>
+<a name="61"></a><br>
+<p>61.&mdash;The happiness or unhappiness of men depends no less
+upon their dispositions than their fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>["Still to ourselves in every place consigned Our own felicity
+we make or find." Goldsmith, <i>Traveller</i>, 431.]</p>
+<a name="62"></a><br>
+<p>62.&mdash;Sincerity is an openness of heart; we find it in
+very few people; what we usually see is only an artful
+dissimulation to win the confidence of others.</p>
+<a name="63"></a><br>
+<p>63.&mdash;The aversion to lying is often a hidden ambition to
+render our words credible and weighty, and to attach a religious
+aspect to our conversation.</p>
+<a name="64"></a><br>
+<p>64.&mdash;Truth does not do as much good in the world, as its
+counterfeits do evil.</p>
+<a name="65"></a><br>
+<p>65.&mdash;There is no praise we have not lavished upon
+Prudence; and yet she cannot assure to us the most trifling
+event.</p>
+
+<p>[The author corrected this maxim several times, in 1665 it is
+No. 75; 1666, No. 66; 1671-5, No. 65; in the last edition it
+stands as at present. In the first he quotes Juvenal, Sat. X.,
+line 315. " Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia, nos te; Nos
+facimus, Fortuna, deam, coeloque locamus." Applying to Prudence
+what Juvenal does to Fortune, and with much greater force.]</p>
+<a name="66"></a><br>
+<p>66.&mdash;A clever man ought to so regulate his interests that
+each will fall in due order. Our greediness so often troubles us,
+making us run after so many things at the same time, that while
+we too eagerly look after the least we miss the greatest.</p>
+<a name="67"></a><br>
+<p>67.&mdash;What grace is to the body good sense is to the
+mind.</p>
+<a name="68"></a><br>
+<p>68.&mdash;It is difficult to define love; all we can say is,
+that in the soul it is a desire to rule, in the mind it is a
+sympathy, and in the body it is a hidden and delicate wish to
+possess what we love&mdash;<i>Plus</i> many mysteries.</p>
+
+<p>["Love is the love of one {singularly,} with desire to be
+singularly beloved."&mdash;Hobbes{<i>Leviathan</i>, (1651), Part I,
+Chapter VI}.]</p>
+
+<p>{Two notes about this quotation: (1) the translators'
+mistakenly have "singularity" for the first "singularly" and (2)
+Hobbes does not actually write "Love is the..."&mdash;he writes
+"Love of one..." under the heading "The passion of Love."}</p>
+<a name="69"></a><br>
+<p>69.&mdash;If there is a pure love, exempt from the mixture of
+our other passions, it is that which is concealed at the bottom
+of the heart and of which even ourselves are ignorant.</p>
+<a name="70"></a><br>
+<p>70.&mdash;There is no disguise which can long hide love where
+it exists, nor feign it where it does not.</p>
+<a name="71"></a><br>
+<p>71.&mdash;There are few people who would not be ashamed of
+being beloved when they love no longer.</p>
+<a name="72"></a><br>
+<p>72.&mdash;If we judge of love by the majority of its results
+it rather resembles hatred than friendship.</p>
+<a name="73"></a><br>
+<p>73.&mdash;We may find women who have never indulged in an
+intrigue, but it is rare to find those who have intrigued but
+once.</p>
+
+<p>["Yet there are some, they say, who have had {<i>None</i>}; But those
+who have, ne'er end with only one}." {&mdash;Lord Byron, }<i>Don
+Juan,</i> {Canto} iii., stanza 4.]</p>
+<a name="74"></a><br>
+<p>74.&mdash;There is only one sort of love, but there are a
+thousand different copies.</p>
+<a name="75"></a><br>
+<p>75.&mdash;Neither love nor fire can subsist without perpetual
+motion; both cease to live so soon as they cease to hope, or to
+fear.</p>
+
+<p>[So Lord Byron{<i>Stanzas</i>, (1819), stanza 3} says of
+Love&mdash; "Like chiefs of faction, His life is action."]</p>
+<a name="76"></a><br>
+<p>76.&mdash;There is real love just as there are real ghosts;
+every person speaks of it, few persons have seen it.</p>
+
+<p>["Oh Love! no habitant of earth thou art&mdash; An unseen
+seraph, we believe in thee&mdash; A faith whose martyrs are the
+broken heart,&mdash; But never yet hath seen, nor e'er shall see
+The naked eye, thy form as it should be." {&mdash;Lord Byron,
+}<i>Childe Harold</i>, {Canto} iv., stanza 121.]</p>
+<a name="77"></a><br>
+<p>77.&mdash;Love lends its name to an infinite number of
+engagements (<i>Commerces</i>) which are attributed to it, but with
+which it has no more concern than the Doge has with all that is
+done in Venice.</p>
+<a name="78"></a><br>
+<p>78.&mdash;The love of justice is simply in the majority of men
+the fear of suffering injustice.</p>
+<a name="79"></a><br>
+<p>79.&mdash;Silence is the best resolve for him who distrusts
+himself.</p>
+<a name="80"></a><br>
+<p>80.&mdash;What renders us so changeable in our friendship is,
+that it is difficult to know the qualities of the soul, but easy
+to know those of the mind.</p>
+<a name="81"></a><br>
+<p>81.&mdash;We can love nothing but what agrees with us, and we
+can only follow our taste or our pleasure when we prefer our
+friends to ourselves; nevertheless it is only by that preference
+that friendship can be true and perfect.</p>
+<a name="82"></a><br>
+<p>82.&mdash;Reconciliation with our enemies is but a desire to
+better our condition, a weariness of war, the fear of some
+unlucky accident.</p>
+
+<p>["Thus terminated that famous war of the Fronde. The Duke
+de la Rochefoucauld desired peace because of his dangerous wounds
+and ruined castles, which had made him dread even worse events.
+On the other side the Queen, who had shown herself so ungrateful
+to her too ambitious friends, did not cease to feel the
+bitterness of their resentment. &lsquo;I wish,' said she,
+&lsquo;it were always night, because daylight shows me so many
+who have betrayed me.'"&mdash;<i>Memoires De Madame De Motteville,
+Tom</i>. IV., p. 60. Another proof that although these maxims are in
+some cases of universal application, they were based entirely on
+the experience of the age in which the author lived.]</p>
+<a name="83"></a><br>
+<p>83.&mdash;What men term friendship is merely a partnership
+with a collection of reciprocal interests, and an exchange of
+favours&mdash;in fact it is but a trade in which self love always
+expects to gain something.</p>
+<a name="84"></a><br>
+<p>84.&mdash;It is more disgraceful to distrust than to be
+deceived by our friends.</p>
+<a name="85"></a><br>
+<p>85.&mdash;We often persuade ourselves to love people who are
+more powerful than we are, yet interest alone produces our
+friendship; we do not give our hearts away for the good we wish
+to do, but for that we expect to receive.</p>
+<a name="86"></a><br>
+<p>86.&mdash;Our distrust of another justifies his deceit.</p>
+<a name="87"></a><br>
+<p>87.&mdash;Men would not live long in society were they not the
+dupes of each other.</p>
+
+<p>[A maxim, adds Aim&eacute; Martin, "Which may enter into the
+code of a vulgar rogue, but one is astonished to find it in a
+moral treatise." Yet we have scriptural authority for it:
+"Deceiving and being deceived."&mdash;2 TIM. iii. 13.]</p>
+<a name="88"></a><br>
+<p>88.&mdash;Self love increases or diminishes for us the good
+qualities of our friends, in proportion to the satisfaction we
+feel with them, and we judge of their merit by the manner in
+which they act towards us.</p>
+<a name="89"></a><br>
+<p>89.&mdash;Everyone blames his memory, no one blames his
+judgment.</p>
+<a name="90"></a><br>
+<p>90.&mdash;In the intercourse of life, we please more by our
+faults than by our good qualities.</p>
+<a name="91"></a><br>
+<p>91.&mdash;The largest ambition has the least appearance of
+ambition when it meets with an absolute impossibility in
+compassing its object.</p>
+<a name="92"></a><br>
+<p>92.&mdash;To awaken a man who is deceived as to his own merit
+is to do him as bad a turn as that done to the Athenian madman
+who was happy in believing that all the ships touching at the
+port belonged to him.</p>
+
+<p>[That is, they cured him. The madman was Thrasyllus, son of
+Pythodorus. His brother Crito cured him, when he infinitely
+regretted the time of his more pleasant madness.&mdash;See
+Aelian, <i>Var. Hist.</i> iv. 25. So Horace&mdash;
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;"Pol, me occidistis,
+amici, Non servastis," ait, "cui sic extorta voluptas Et demptus
+per vim mentis gratissimus error." HOR. EP. ii&mdash;2, 138, of
+the madman who was cured of a pleasant lunacy.]</p>
+<a name="93"></a><br>
+<p>93.&mdash;Old men delight in giving good advice as a
+consolation for the fact that they can no longer set bad
+examples.</p>
+<a name="94"></a><br>
+<p>94.&mdash;Great names degrade instead of elevating those who
+know not how to sustain them.</p>
+<a name="95"></a><br>
+<p>95.&mdash;The test of extraordinary merit is to see those who
+envy it the most yet obliged to praise it.</p>
+<a name="96"></a><br>
+<p>96.&mdash;A man is perhaps ungrateful, but often less
+chargeable with ingratitude than his benefactor is.</p>
+<a name="97"></a><br>
+<p>97.&mdash;We are deceived if we think that mind and judgment
+are two different matters: judgment is but the extent of the
+light of the mind. This light penetrates to the bottom of
+matters; it remarks all that can be remarked, and perceives what
+appears imperceptible. Therefore we must agree that it is the
+extent of the light in the mind that produces all the effects
+which we attribute to judgment.</p>
+<a name="98"></a><br>
+<p>98.&mdash;Everyone praises his heart, none dare praise their
+understanding.</p>
+<a name="99"></a><br>
+<p>99.&mdash;Politeness of mind consists in thinking chaste and
+refined thoughts.</p>
+<a name="100"></a><br>
+<p>100.&mdash;Gallantry of mind is saying the most empty things
+in an agreeable manner.</p>
+<a name="101"></a><br>
+<p>101.&mdash;Ideas often flash across our minds more complete
+than we could make them after much labour.</p>
+<a name="102"></a><br>
+<p>102.&mdash;The head is ever the dupe of the heart.</p>
+
+<p>[A feeble imitation of that great thought "All folly comes
+from the heart."&mdash;<i>Aim&eacute; Martin</i>. But Bonhome, in his
+<i>L'art De Penser</i>, says "Plusieurs diraient en p&eacute;riode
+quarr&eacute; que quelques reflexions que fasse l'esprit et
+quelques resolutions qu'il prenne pour corriger ses travers le
+premier sentiment du coeur renverse tous ses projets. Mais il
+n'appartient qu'a M. de la Rochefoucauld de dire tout en un mot
+que l'esprit est toujours la dupe du coeur."]</p>
+<a name="103"></a><br>
+<p>103.&mdash;Those who know their minds do not necessarily know
+their hearts.</p>
+<a name="104"></a><br>
+<p>104.&mdash;Men and things have each their proper perspective;
+to judge rightly of some it is necessary to see them near, of
+others we can never judge rightly but at a distance.</p>
+<a name="105"></a><br>
+<p>105.&mdash;A man for whom accident discovers sense, is not a
+rational being. A man only is so who understands, who
+distinguishes, who tests it.</p>
+<a name="106"></a><br>
+<p>106.&mdash;To understand matters rightly we should understand
+their details, and as that knowledge is almost infinite, our
+knowledge is always superficial and imperfect.</p>
+<a name="107"></a><br>
+<p>107.&mdash;One kind of flirtation is to boast we never
+flirt.</p>
+<a name="108"></a><br>
+<p>108.&mdash;The head cannot long play the part of the
+heart.</p>
+<a name="109"></a><br>
+<p>109.&mdash;Youth changes its tastes by the warmth of its
+blood, age retains its tastes by habit.</p>
+<a name="110"></a><br>
+<p>110.&mdash;Nothing is given so profusely as advice.</p>
+<a name="111"></a><br>
+<p>111.&mdash;The more we love a woman the more prone we are to
+hate her.</p>
+<a name="112"></a><br>
+<p>112.&mdash;The blemishes of the mind, like those of the face,
+increase by age.</p>
+<a name="113"></a><br>
+<p>113.&mdash;There may be good but there are no pleasant
+marriages.</p>
+<a name="114"></a><br>
+<p>114.&mdash;We are inconsolable at being deceived by our
+enemies and betrayed by our friends, yet still we are often
+content to be thus served by ourselves.</p>
+<a name="115"></a><br>
+<p>115.&mdash;It is as easy unwittingly to deceive oneself as to
+deceive others.</p>
+<a name="116"></a><br>
+<p>116.&mdash;Nothing is less sincere than the way of asking and
+giving advice. The person asking seems to pay deference to the
+opinion of his friend, while thinking in reality of making his
+friend approve his opinion and be responsible for his conduct.
+The person giving the advice returns the confidence placed in him
+by eager and disinterested zeal, in doing which he is usually
+guided only by his own interest or reputation.</p>
+
+<p>["I have often thought how ill-natured a maxim it was which on
+many occasions I have heard from people of good understanding,
+&lsquo;That as to what related to private conduct no one was ever
+the better for advice.' But upon further examination I have
+resolved with myself that the maxim might be admitted without any
+violent prejudice to mankind. For in the manner advice was
+generally given there was no reason I thought to wonder it should
+be so ill received, something there was which strangely inverted
+the case, and made the giver to be the only gainer. For by what I
+could observe in many occurrences of our lives, that which we
+called giving advice was properly taking an occasion to show our
+own wisdom at another's expense. On the other side to be
+instructed or to receive advice on the terms usually prescribed
+to us was little better than tamely to afford another the
+occasion of raising himself a character from our
+defects."&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury, <i>Characteristics</i>, i., 153.]</p>
+<a name="117"></a><br>
+<p>117.&mdash;The most subtle of our acts is to simulate
+blindness for snares that we know are set for us. We are never so
+easily deceived as when trying to deceive.</p>
+<a name="118"></a><br>
+<p>118.&mdash;The intention of never deceiving often exposes us
+to deception.</p>
+<a name="119"></a><br>
+<p>119.&mdash;We become so accustomed to disguise ourselves to
+others that at last we are disguised to ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>["Those who quit their proper character{,} to assume what does
+not belong to them, are{,} for the greater part{,} ignorant both
+of the character they leave{,} and of the character they
+assume."&mdash;Burke, {<i>Reflections On The Revolution In France</i>,
+(1790), Paragraph 19}.]</p>
+
+<p>{The translators' incorrectly cite <i>Thoughts On The Cause Of
+The Present Discontents</i>.}</p>
+<a name="120"></a><br>
+<p>120.&mdash;We often act treacherously more from weakness than
+from a fixed motive.</p>
+<a name="121"></a><br>
+<p>121.&mdash;We frequently do good to enable us with impunity to
+do evil.</p>
+<a name="122"></a><br>
+<p>122.&mdash;If we conquer our passions it is more from their
+weakness than from our strength.</p>
+<a name="123"></a><br>
+<p>123.&mdash;If we never flattered ourselves we should have but
+scant pleasure.</p>
+<a name="124"></a><br>
+<p>124.&mdash;The most deceitful persons spend their lives in
+blaming deceit, so as to use it on some great occasion to promote
+some great interest.</p>
+<a name="125"></a><br>
+<p>125.&mdash;The daily employment of cunning marks a little
+mind, it generally happens that those who resort to it in one
+respect to protect themselves lay themselves open to attack in
+another.</p>
+
+<p>["With that low cunning which in fools supplies, And amply,
+too, the place of being wise." Churchill, <i>Rosciad</i>, 117.]</p>
+<a name="126"></a><br>
+<p>126.&mdash;Cunning and treachery are the offspring of
+incapacity.</p>
+<a name="127"></a><br>
+<p>127.&mdash;The true way to be deceived is to think oneself
+more knowing than others.</p>
+<a name="128"></a><br>
+<p>128.&mdash;Too great cleverness is but deceptive delicacy,
+true delicacy is the most substantial cleverness.</p>
+<a name="129"></a><br>
+<p>129.&mdash;It is sometimes necessary to play the fool to avoid
+being deceived by cunning men.</p>
+<a name="130"></a><br>
+<p>130.&mdash;Weakness is the only fault which cannot be
+cured.</p>
+<a name="131"></a><br>
+<p>131.&mdash;The smallest fault of women who give themselves up
+to love is to love. [&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;"Faciunt graviora
+coactae Imperio sexus minimumque libidine peccant." Juvenal, <i>Sat.</i>
+vi., 134.]</p>
+<a name="132"></a><br>
+<p>132.&mdash;It is far easier to be wise for others than to be
+so for oneself.</p>
+
+<p>[Hence the proverb, "A man who is his own lawyer has a fool
+for his client."]</p>
+<a name="133"></a><br>
+<p>133.&mdash;The only good examples are those, that make us see
+the absurdity of bad originals.</p>
+<a name="134"></a><br>
+<p>134.&mdash;We are never so ridiculous from the habits we have
+as from those that we affect to have.</p>
+<a name="135"></a><br>
+<p>135.&mdash;We sometimes differ more widely from ourselves than
+we do from others.</p>
+<a name="136"></a><br>
+<p>136.&mdash;There are some who never would have loved if they
+never had heard it spoken of.</p>
+<a name="137"></a><br>
+<p>137.&mdash;When not prompted by vanity we say little.</p>
+<a name="138"></a><br>
+<p>138.&mdash;A man would rather say evil of himself than say
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>["Montaigne's vanity led him to talk perpetually of himself,
+and as often happens to vain men, he would rather talk of his own
+failings than of any foreign subject."&mdash; Hallam, <i>Literature
+Of Europe</i>.]</p>
+<a name="139"></a><br>
+<p>139.&mdash;One of the reasons that we find so few persons
+rational and agreeable in conversation is there is hardly a
+person who does not think more of what he wants to say than of
+his answer to what is said. The most clever and polite are
+content with only seeming attentive while we perceive in their
+mind and eyes that at the very time they are wandering from what
+is said and desire to return to what they want to say. Instead of
+considering that the worst way to persuade or please others is to
+try thus strongly to please ourselves, and that to listen well
+and to answer well are some of the greatest charms we can have in
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>["An absent man can make but few observations, he can pursue
+nothing steadily because his absences make him lose his way. They
+are very disagreeable and hardly to be tolerated in old age, but
+in youth they cannot be forgiven." &mdash;Lord Chesterfield,
+<i>Letter</i> 195.]</p>
+<a name="140"></a><br>
+<p>140.&mdash;If it was not for the company of fools, a witty man
+would often be greatly at a loss.</p>
+<a name="141"></a><br>
+<p>141.&mdash;We often boast that we are never bored, but yet we
+are so conceited that we do not perceive how often we bore
+others.</p>
+<a name="142"></a><br>
+<p>142.&mdash;As it is the mark of great minds to say many things
+in a few words, so it is that of little minds to use many words
+to say nothing.</p>
+
+<p>["So much they talked, so very little said." Churchill,
+<i>Rosciad</i>, 550.</p>
+
+<p>"Men who are unequal to the labour of discussing an argument
+or wish to avoid it, are willing enough to suppose that much has
+been proved because much has been said."&mdash; Junius, Jan.
+1769.]</p>
+<a name="143"></a><br>
+<p>143.&mdash;It is oftener by the estimation of our own feelings
+that we exaggerate the good qualities of others than by their
+merit, and when we praise them we wish to attract their
+praise.</p>
+<a name="144"></a><br>
+<p>144.&mdash;We do not like to praise, and we never praise
+without a motive. Praise is flattery, artful, hidden, delicate,
+which gratifies differently him who praises and him who is
+praised. The one takes it as the reward of merit, the other
+bestows it to show his impartiality and knowledge.</p>
+<a name="145"></a><br>
+<p>145.&mdash;We often select envenomed praise which, by a
+reaction upon those we praise, shows faults we could not have
+shown by other means.</p>
+<a name="146"></a><br>
+<p>146.&mdash;Usually we only praise to be praised.</p>
+<a name="147"></a><br>
+<p>147.&mdash;Few are sufficiently wise to prefer censure which
+is useful to praise which is treacherous.</p>
+<a name="148"></a><br>
+<p>148.&mdash;Some reproaches praise; some praises re-
+proach.</p>
+
+<p>["Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer, And, without
+sneering, teach the rest to sneer." Pope {<i>Essay On Man, (1733),
+Epistle To Dr. Arbuthnot.</i>}]</p>
+<a name="149"></a><br>
+<p>149.&mdash;The refusal of praise is only the wish to be
+praised twice.</p>
+
+<p>[The modesty which pretends to refuse praise is but in truth a
+desire to be praised more highly. <i>Edition</i> 1665.]</p>
+<a name="150"></a><br>
+<p>150.&mdash;The desire which urges us to deserve praise
+strengthens our good qualities, and praise given to wit, valour,
+and beauty, tends to increase them.</p>
+<a name="151"></a><br>
+<p>151.&mdash;It is easier to govern others than to prevent being
+governed.</p>
+<a name="152"></a><br>
+<p>152.&mdash;If we never flattered ourselves the flattery of
+others would not hurt us.</p>
+
+<p>["Adulatione servilia fingebant securi de fragilitate
+credentis." Tacit. Ann. xvi.]</p>
+<a name="153"></a><br>
+<p>153.&mdash;Nature makes merit but fortune sets it to work.</p>
+<a name="154"></a><br>
+<p>154.&mdash;Fortune cures us of many faults that reason could
+not.</p>
+<a name="155"></a><br>
+<p>155.&mdash;There are some persons who only disgust with their
+abilities, there are persons who please even with their
+faults.</p>
+<a name="156"></a><br>
+<p>156.&mdash;There are persons whose only merit consists in
+saying and doing stupid things at the right time, and who ruin
+all if they change their manners.</p>
+<a name="157"></a><br>
+<p>157.&mdash;The fame of great men ought always to be estimated
+by the means used to acquire it.</p>
+<a name="158"></a><br>
+<p>158.&mdash;Flattery is base coin to which only our vanity
+gives currency.</p>
+<a name="159"></a><br>
+<p>159.&mdash;It is not enough to have great qualities, we should
+also have the management of them.</p>
+<a name="160"></a><br>
+<p>160.&mdash;However brilliant an action it should not be
+esteemed great unless the result of a great motive.</p>
+<a name="161"></a><br>
+<p>161.&mdash;A certain harmony should be kept between actions
+and ideas if we desire to estimate the effects that they
+produce.</p>
+<a name="162"></a><br>
+<p>162.&mdash;The art of using moderate abilities to advantage
+wins praise, and often acquires more reputation than real
+brilliancy.</p>
+<a name="163"></a><br>
+<p>163.&mdash;Numberless arts appear foolish whose secre{t}
+motives are most wise and weighty.</p>
+<a name="164"></a><br>
+<p>164.&mdash;It is much easier to seem fitted for posts we do
+not fill than for those we do.</p>
+<a name="165"></a><br>
+<p>165.&mdash;Ability wins us the esteem of the true men, luck
+that of the people.</p>
+<a name="166"></a><br>
+<p>166.&mdash;The world oftener rewards the appearance of merit
+than merit itself.</p>
+<a name="167"></a><br>
+<p>167.&mdash;Avarice is more opposed to economy than to
+liberality.</p>
+<a name="168"></a><br>
+<p>168.&mdash;However deceitful hope may be, yet she carries us
+on pleasantly to the end of life.</p>
+
+<p>["Hope travels through, nor quits us when we die." Pope: <i>Essay
+On Man,</i> Ep. ii.]</p>
+<a name="169"></a><br>
+<p>169.&mdash;Idleness and fear keeps us in the path of duty, but
+our virtue often gets the praise.</p>
+
+<p>["Quod segnitia erat sapientia vocaretur." Tacitus Hist.
+I.]</p>
+<a name="170"></a><br>
+<p>170.&mdash;If one acts rightly and honestly, it is difficult
+to decide whether it is the effect of integrity or skill.</p>
+<a name="171"></a><br>
+<p>171.&mdash;As rivers are lost in the sea so are virtues in
+self.</p>
+<a name="172"></a><br>
+<p>172.&mdash;If we thoroughly consider the varied effects of
+indifference we find we miscarry more in our duties than in our
+interests.</p>
+<a name="173"></a><br>
+<p>173.&mdash;There are different kinds of curiosity: one springs
+from interest, which makes us desire to know everything that may
+be profitable to us; another from pride, which springs from a
+desire of knowing what others are ignorant of.</p>
+<a name="174"></a><br>
+<p>174.&mdash;It is far better to accustom our mind to bear the
+ills we have than to speculate on those which may befall us.</p>
+
+<p>["Rather bear th{ose} ills we have Than fly to others that we
+know not of." {&mdash;Shakespeare, <i>Hamlet</i>, Act III, Scene I,
+Hamlet.}]</p>
+<a name="175"></a><br>
+<p>175.&mdash;Constancy in love is a perpetual inconstancy which
+causes our heart to attach itself to all the qualities of the
+person we love in succession, sometimes giving the preference to
+one, sometimes to another. This constancy is merely inconstancy
+fixed, and limited to the same person.</p>
+<a name="176"></a><br>
+<p>176.&mdash;There are two kinds of constancy in love, one
+arising from incessantly finding in the loved one fresh objects
+to love, the other from regarding it as a point of honour to be
+constant.</p>
+<a name="177"></a><br>
+<p>177.&mdash;Perseverance is not deserving of blame or praise,
+as it is merely the continuance of tastes and feelings which we
+can neither create or destroy.</p>
+<a name="178"></a><br>
+<p>178.&mdash;What makes us like new studies is not so much the
+weariness we have of the old or the wish for change as the desire
+to be admired by those who know more than ourselves, and the hope
+of advantage over those who know less.</p>
+<a name="179"></a><br>
+<p>179.&mdash;We sometimes complain of the levity of our friends
+to justify our own by anticipation.</p>
+<a name="180"></a><br>
+<p>180.&mdash;Our repentance is not so much sorrow for the ill we
+have done as fear of the ill that may happen to us.</p>
+<a name="181"></a><br>
+<p>181.&mdash;One sort of inconstancy springs from levity or
+weakness of mind, and makes us accept everyone's opinion, and
+another more excusable comes from a surfeit of matter.</p>
+<a name="182"></a><br>
+<p>182.&mdash;Vices enter into the composition of virtues as
+poison into that of medicines. Prudence collects and blends the
+two and renders them useful against the ills of life.</p>
+<a name="183"></a><br>
+<p>183.&mdash;For the credit of virtue we must admit that the
+greatest misfortunes of men are those into which they fall
+through their crimes.</p>
+<a name="184"></a><br>
+<p>184.&mdash;We admit our faults to repair by our sincerity the
+evil we have done in the opinion of others.</p>
+
+<p>[In the edition of 1665 this maxim stands as No. 200. We never
+admit our faults except through vanity.]</p>
+<a name="185"></a><br>
+<p>185.&mdash;There are both heroes of evil and heroes of
+good.</p>
+
+<p>[Ut alios industria ita hunc ignavia protulerat ad famam,
+habebaturque non ganeo et profligator sed erudito luxu.
+&mdash;Tacit. Ann. xvi.]</p>
+<a name="186"></a><br>
+<p>186.&mdash;We do not despise all who have vices, but we do
+despise all who have not virtues.</p>
+
+<p>["If individuals have no virtues their vices may be of use to
+us."&mdash;<i>Junius</i>, 5th Oct. 1771.]</p>
+<a name="187"></a><br>
+<p>187.&mdash;The name of virtue is as useful to our interest as
+that of vice.</p>
+<a name="188"></a><br>
+<p>188.&mdash;The health of the mind is not less uncertain than
+that of the body, and when passions seem furthest removed we are
+no less in danger of infection than of falling ill when we are
+well.</p>
+<a name="189"></a><br>
+<p>189.&mdash;It seems that nature has at man's birth fixed the
+bounds of his virtues and vices.</p>
+<a name="190"></a><br>
+<p>190.&mdash;Great men should not have great faults.</p>
+<a name="191"></a><br>
+<p>191.&mdash;We may say vices wait on us in the course of our
+life as the landlords with whom we successively lodge, and if we
+travelled the road twice over I doubt if our experience would
+make us avoid them.</p>
+<a name="192"></a><br>
+<p>192.&mdash;When our vices leave us we flatter ourselves with
+the idea we have left them.</p>
+<a name="193"></a><br>
+<p>193.&mdash;There are relapses in the diseases of the mind as
+in those of the body; what we call a cure is often no more than
+an intermission or change of disease.</p>
+<a name="194"></a><br>
+<p>194.&mdash;The defects of the mind are like the wounds of the
+body. Whatever care we take to heal them the scars ever remain,
+and there is always danger of their reopening.</p>
+<a name="195"></a><br>
+<p>195.&mdash;The reason which often prevents us abandoning a
+single vice is having so many.</p>
+<a name="196"></a><br>
+<p>196.&mdash;We easily forget those faults which are known only
+to ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>[Seneca says "Innocentem quisque se dicit respiciens testem
+non conscientiam."]</p>
+<a name="197"></a><br>
+<p>197.&mdash;There are men of whom we can never believe evil
+without having seen it. Yet there are very few in whom we should
+be surprised to see it.</p>
+<a name="198"></a><br>
+<p>198.&mdash;We exaggerate the glory of some men to detract from
+that of others, and we should praise Prince Cond&eacute; and
+Marshal Turenne much less if we did not want to blame them
+both.</p>
+
+<p>[The allusion to Cond&eacute; and Turenne gives the date at
+which these maxims were published in 1665. Cond&eacute; and
+Turenne were after their campaign with the Imperialists at the
+height of their fame. It proves the truth of the remark of
+Tacitus, "Populus neminem sine aemulo sinit."&mdash; Tac. Ann.
+xiv.]</p>
+<a name="199"></a><br>
+<p>199.&mdash;The desire to appear clever often prevents our
+being so.</p>
+<a name="200"></a><br>
+<p>200.&mdash;Virtue would not go far did not vanity escort
+her.</p>
+<a name="201"></a><br>
+<p>201.&mdash;He who thinks he has the power to content the world
+greatly deceives himself, but he who thinks that the world cannot
+be content with him deceives himself yet more.</p>
+<a name="202"></a><br>
+<p>202.&mdash;Falsely honest men are those who disguise their
+faults both to themselves and others; truly honest men are those
+who know them perfectly and confess them.</p>
+<a name="203"></a><br>
+<p>203.&mdash;He is really wise who is nettled at nothing.</p>
+<a name="204"></a><br>
+<p>204.&mdash;The coldness of women is a balance and burden they
+add to their beauty.</p>
+<a name="205"></a><br>
+<p>205.&mdash;Virtue in woman is often the love of reputation and
+repose.</p>
+<a name="206"></a><br>
+<p>206.&mdash;He is a truly good man who desires always to bear
+the inspection of good men.</p>
+<a name="207"></a><br>
+<p>207.&mdash;Folly follows us at all stages of life. If one
+appears wise 'tis but because his folly is proportioned to his
+age and fortune.</p>
+<a name="208"></a><br>
+<p>208.&mdash;There are foolish people who know and who skilfully
+use their folly.</p>
+<a name="209"></a><br>
+<p>209.&mdash;Who lives without folly is not so wise as he
+thinks.</p>
+<a name="210"></a><br>
+<p>210.&mdash;In growing old we become more foolish&mdash;and
+more wise.</p>
+<a name="211"></a><br>
+<p>211.&mdash;There are people who are like farces, which are
+praised but for a time (however foolish and distasteful they may
+be).</p>
+
+<p>[The last clause is added from Edition of 1665.]</p>
+<a name="212"></a><br>
+<p>212.&mdash;Most people judge men only by success or by
+fortune.</p>
+<a name="213"></a><br>
+<p>213.&mdash;Love of glory, fear of shame, greed of fortune, the
+desire to make life agreeable and comfortable, and the wish to
+depreciate others are often causes of that bravery so vaunted
+among men.</p>
+
+<p>[Junius said of the Marquis of Granby, "He was as brave as a
+total absence of all feeling and reflection could make
+him."&mdash;21st Jan. 1769.]</p>
+<a name="214"></a><br>
+<p>214.&mdash;Valour in common soldiers is a perilous method of
+earning their living.</p>
+
+<p>["Men venture necks to gain a fortune, The soldier does it
+ev{'}ry day, (Eight to the week) for sixpence pay."
+{&mdash;Samuel Butler,} <i>Hudibras</i>, Part II., canto i., line
+512.]</p>
+<a name="215"></a><br>
+<p>215.&mdash;Perfect bravery and sheer cowardice are two
+extremes rarely found. The space between them is vast, and
+embraces all other sorts of courage. The difference between them
+is not less than between faces and tempers. Men will freely
+expose themselves at the beginning of an action, and relax and be
+easily discouraged if it should last. Some are content to satisfy
+worldly honour, and beyond that will do little else. Some are not
+always equally masters of their timidity. Others allow themselves
+to be overcome by panic; others charge because they dare not
+remain at their posts. Some may be found whose courage is
+strengthened by small perils, which prepare them to face greater
+dangers. Some will dare a sword cut and flinch from a bullet;
+others dread bullets little and fear to fight with swords. These
+varied kinds of courage agree in this, that night, by increasing
+fear and concealing gallant or cowardly actions, allows men to
+spare themselves. There is even a more general discretion to be
+observed, for we meet with no man who does all he would have done
+if he were assured of getting off scot-free; so that it is
+certain that the fear of death does somewhat subtract from
+valour.</p>
+
+<p>[See also "Table Talk of Napoleon," who agrees with this, so
+far as to say that few, but himself, had a two o'clock of the
+morning valour.]</p>
+<a name="216"></a><br>
+<p>216.&mdash;Perfect valour is to do without witnesses what one
+would do before all the world.</p>
+
+<p>["It is said of untrue valours that some men's valours are in
+the eyes of them that look on."&mdash;Bacon, <i>Advancement Of
+Learning</i>{, (1605), Book I, Section II, paragraph 5}.]</p>
+<a name="217"></a><br>
+<p>217.&mdash;Intrepidity is an extraordinary strength of soul
+which raises it above the troubles, disorders, and emotions which
+the sight of great perils can arouse in it: by this strength
+heroes maintain a calm aspect and preserve their reason and
+liberty in the most surprising and terrible accidents.</p>
+<a name="218"></a><br>
+<p>218.&mdash;Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue.</p>
+
+<p>[So Massillon, in one of his sermons, "Vice pays homage to
+virtue in doing honour to her appearance."</p>
+
+<p>So Junius, writing to the Duke of Grafton, says, "You have
+done as much mischief to the community as Machiavel, if Machiavel
+had not known that an appearance of morals and religion are
+useful in society."&mdash;28 Sept. 1771.]</p>
+<a name="219"></a><br>
+<p>219.&mdash;Most men expose themselves in battle enough to save
+their honor, few wish to do so more than sufficiently, or than is
+necessary to make the design for which they expose themselves
+succeed.</p>
+<a name="220"></a><br>
+<p>220.&mdash;Vanity, shame, and above all disposition, often
+make men brave and women chaste.</p>
+
+<p>["Vanity bids all her sons be brave and all her daughters
+chaste and courteous. But why do we need her instruction?"&mdash;Sterne, <i>Sermons</i>.]</p>
+<a name="221"></a><br>
+<p>221.&mdash;We do not wish to lose life; we do wish to gain
+glory, and this makes brave men show more tact and address in
+avoiding death, than rogues show in preserving their
+fortunes.</p>
+<a name="222"></a><br>
+<p>222.&mdash;Few persons on the first approach of age do not
+show wherein their body, or their mind, is beginning to fail.</p>
+<a name="223"></a><br>
+<p>223.&mdash;Gratitude is as the good faith of merchants: it
+holds commerce together; and we do not pay because it is just to
+pay debts, but because we shall thereby more easily find people
+who will lend.</p>
+<a name="224"></a><br>
+<p>224.&mdash;All those who pay the debts of gratitude cannot
+thereby flatter themselves that they are grateful.</p>
+<a name="225"></a><br>
+<p>225.&mdash;What makes false reckoning, as regards gratitude,
+is that the pride of the giver and the receiver cannot agree as
+to the value of the benefit.</p>
+
+<p>["The first foundation of friendship is not the power of
+conferring benefits, but the equality with which they are
+received, and may be returned."&mdash;Junius's <i>Letter To The
+King.</i>]</p>
+<a name="226"></a><br>
+<p>226.&mdash;Too great a hurry to discharge of an obligation is
+a kind of ingratitude.</p>
+<a name="227"></a><br>
+<p>227.&mdash;Lucky people are bad hands at correcting their
+faults; they always believe that they are right when fortune
+backs up their vice or folly.</p>
+
+<p>["The power of fortune is confessed only by the miserable, for
+the happy impute all their success to prudence and
+merit."&mdash;Swift, <i>Thoughts On Various Subjects</i>]</p>
+<a name="228"></a><br>
+<p>228.&mdash;Pride will not owe, self-love will not pay.</p>
+<a name="229"></a><br>
+<p>229.&mdash;The good we have received from a man should make us
+excuse the wrong he does us.</p>
+<a name="230"></a><br>
+<p>230.&mdash;Nothing is so infectious as example, and we never
+do great good or evil without producing the like. We imitate good
+actions by emulation, and bad ones by the evil of our nature,
+which shame imprisons until example liberates.</p>
+<a name="231"></a><br>
+<p>231.&mdash;It is great folly to wish only to be wise.</p>
+<a name="232"></a><br>
+<p>232.&mdash;Whatever pretext we give to our afflictions it is
+always interest or vanity that causes them.</p>
+<a name="233"></a><br>
+<p>233.&mdash;In afflictions there are various kinds of
+hypocrisy. In one, under the pretext of weeping for one dear to
+us we bemoan ourselves; we regret her good opinion of us, we
+deplore the loss of our comfort, our pleasure, our consideration.
+Thus the dead have the credit of tears shed for the living. I
+affirm 'tis a kind of hypocrisy which in these afflictions
+deceives itself. There is another kind not so innocent because it
+imposes on all the world, that is the grief of those who aspire
+to the glory of a noble and immortal sorrow. After Time, which
+absorbs all, has obliterated what sorrow they had, they still
+obstinately obtrude their tears, their sighs their groans, they
+wear a solemn face, and try to persuade others by all their acts,
+that their grief will end only with their life. This sad and
+distressing vanity is commonly found in ambitious women. As their
+sex closes to them all paths to glory, they strive to render
+themselves celebrated by showing an inconsolable affliction.
+There is yet another kind of tears arising from but small
+sources, which flow easily and cease as easily. One weeps to
+achieve a reputation for tenderness, weeps to be pitied, weeps to
+be bewept, in fact one weeps to avoid the disgrace of not
+weeping!</p>
+
+<p>["In grief the {<i>Pleasure</i>} is still uppermost{;} and the
+affliction we suffer has no resemblance to absolute pain which is
+always odious, and which we endeavour to shake off as soon as
+possible."&mdash;Burke, <i>Sublime And Beautiful</i>{, (1756), Part I,
+Sect. V}.]</p>
+<a name="234"></a><br>
+<p>234.&mdash;It is more often from pride than from ignorance
+that we are so obstinately opposed to current opinions; we find
+the first places taken, and we do not want to be the last.</p>
+<a name="235"></a><br>
+<p>235.&mdash;We are easily consoled at the misfortunes of our
+friends when they enable us to prove our tenderness for them.</p>
+<a name="236"></a><br>
+<p>236.&mdash;It would seem that even self-love may be the dupe
+of goodness and forget itself when we work for others. And yet it
+is but taking the shortest way to arrive at its aim, taking usury
+under the pretext of giving, in fact winning everybody in a
+subtle and delicate manner.</p>
+<a name="237"></a><br>
+<p>237.&mdash;No one should be praised for his goodness if he has
+not strength enough to be wicked. All other goodness is but too
+often an idleness or powerlessness of will.</p>
+<a name="238"></a><br>
+<p>238.&mdash;It is not so dangerous to do wrong to most men, as
+to do them too much good.</p>
+<a name="239"></a><br>
+<p>239.&mdash;Nothing flatters our pride so much as the
+confidence of the great, because we regard it as the result of
+our worth, without remembering that generally 'tis but vanity, or
+the inability to keep a secret.</p>
+<a name="240"></a><br>
+<p>240.&mdash;We may say of conformity as distinguished from
+beauty, that it is a symmetry which knows no rules, and a secret
+harmony of features both one with each other and with the colour
+and appearance of the person.</p>
+<a name="241"></a><br>
+<p>241.&mdash;Flirtation is at the bottom of woman's nature,
+although all do not practise it, some being restrained by fear,
+others by sense.</p>
+
+<p>["By nature woman is a flirt, but her flirting changes both in
+the mode and object according to her opinions."&mdash; Rousseau,
+<i>Emile.</i>]</p>
+<a name="242"></a><br>
+<p>242.&mdash;We often bore others when we think we cannot
+possibly bore them.</p>
+<a name="243"></a><br>
+<p>243.&mdash;Few things are impossible in themselves;
+application to make them succeed fails us more often than the
+means.</p>
+<a name="244"></a><br>
+<p>244.&mdash;Sovereign ability consists in knowing the value of
+things.</p>
+<a name="245"></a><br>
+<p>245.&mdash;There is great ability in knowing how to conceal
+one's ability.</p>
+
+<p>["You have accomplished a great stroke in diplomacy when you
+have made others think that you have only very average
+abilities."&mdash;<i>La Bruy&egrave;re</i>.]</p>
+<a name="246"></a><br>
+<p>246.&mdash;What seems generosity is often disguised ambition,
+that despises small to run after greater interest.</p>
+<a name="247"></a><br>
+<p>247.&mdash;The fidelity of most men is merely an invention of
+self-love to win confidence; a method to place us above others
+and to render us depositaries of the most important matters.</p>
+<a name="248"></a><br>
+<p>248.&mdash;Magnanimity despises all, to win all.</p>
+<a name="249"></a><br>
+<p>249.&mdash;There is no less eloquence in the voice, in the
+eyes and in the air of a speaker than in his choice of words.</p>
+<a name="250"></a><br>
+<p>250.&mdash;True eloquence consists in saying all that should
+be, not all that could be said.</p>
+<a name="251"></a><br>
+<p>251.&mdash;There are people whose faults become them, others
+whose very virtues disgrace them.</p>
+
+<p>["There are faults which do him honour, and virtues that
+disgrace him."&mdash;Junius, <i>Letter Of 28th May, 1770.</i>]</p>
+<a name="252"></a><br>
+<p>252.&mdash;It is as common to change one's tastes, as it is
+uncommon to change one's inclinations.</p>
+<a name="253"></a><br>
+<p>253.&mdash;Interest sets at work all sorts of virtues and
+vices.</p>
+<a name="254"></a><br>
+<p>254.&mdash;Humility is often a feigned submission which we
+employ to supplant others. It is one of the devices of Pride to
+lower us to raise us; and truly pride transforms itself in a
+thousand ways, and is never so well disguised and more able to
+deceive than when it hides itself under the form of humility.</p>
+
+<p>["Grave and plausible enough to be thought fit for busi-
+ness."&mdash;Junius, <i>Letter To The Duke Of Grafton</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"He saw a cottage with a double coach-house, A cottage of
+gentility, And the devil was pleased, for his darling sin Is the
+pride that apes humility." Southey, <i>Devil's Walk</i>.]</p>
+
+<p>{There are numerous corrections necessary for this quotation;
+I will keep the original above so you can compare the correct
+passages:</p>
+
+<p>"He passed a cottage with a double coach-house, A cottage of
+gentility, And he owned with a grin, That his favourite sin Is
+pride that apes humility." &mdash;Southey, <i>Devil's Walk</i>, Stanza
+8.</p>
+
+<p>"And the devil did grin, for his darling sin Is pride that
+apes humility." &mdash;Samuel Taylor Coleridge, <i>The Devil's
+Thoughts</i>}</p>
+<a name="255"></a><br>
+<p>255.&mdash;All feelings have their peculiar tone of voice,
+gestures and looks, and this harmony, as it is good or bad,
+pleasant or unpleasant, makes people agreeable or
+disagreeable.</p>
+<a name="256"></a><br>
+<p>256.&mdash;In all professions we affect a part and an
+appearance to seem what we wish to be. Thus the world is merely
+composed of actors.</p>
+
+<p>["All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely
+players."&mdash;Shakespeare, <i>As You Like It</i>{, Act II, Scene VII,
+Jaques}.</p>
+
+<p>"Life is no more than a dramatic scene, in which the hero
+should preserve his consistency to the last."&mdash;Junius.]</p>
+<a name="257"></a><br>
+<p>257.&mdash;Gravity is a mysterious carriage of the body
+invented to conceal the want of mind.</p>
+
+<p>["Gravity is the very essence of
+imposture."&mdash;Shaftesbury, <i>Characteristics</i>, p. 11, vol. I.
+"The very essence of gravity is design, and consequently deceit;
+a taught trick to gain credit with the world for more sense and
+knowledge than a man was worth, and that with all its pretensions
+it was no better, but often worse, than what a French wit had
+long ago defined it&mdash;a mysterious carriage of the body to
+cover the defects of the mind."&mdash;Sterne, <i>Tristram Shandy</i>,
+vol. I., chap. ii.]</p>
+<a name="258"></a><br>
+<p>258.&mdash;Good taste arises more from judgment than wit.</p>
+<a name="259"></a><br>
+<p>259.&mdash;The pleasure of love is in loving, we are happier
+in the passion we feel than in that we inspire.</p>
+<a name="260"></a><br>
+<p>260.&mdash;Civility is but a desire to receive civility, and
+to be esteemed polite.</p>
+<a name="261"></a><br>
+<p>261.&mdash;The usual education of young people is to inspire
+them with a second self-love.</p>
+<a name="262"></a><br>
+<p>262.&mdash;There is no passion wherein self-love reigns so
+powerfully as in love, and one is always more ready to sacrifice
+the peace of the loved one than his own.</p>
+<a name="263"></a><br>
+<p>263.&mdash;What we call liberality is often but the vanity of
+giving, which we like more than that we give away.</p>
+<a name="264"></a><br>
+<p>264.&mdash;Pity is often a reflection of our own evils in the
+ills of others. It is a delicate foresight of the troubles into
+which we may fall. We help others that on like occasions we may
+be helped ourselves, and these services which we render, are in
+reality benefits we confer on ourselves by anticipation.</p>
+
+<p>["<i>Grief</i> for the calamity of another is pity, and ariseth from
+the imagination that a like calamity may befal himself{;} and
+therefore is called compassion."&mdash;<i>Hobbes' Leviathan</i>{,
+(1651), Part I, Chapter VI}.]</p>
+<a name="265"></a><br>
+<p>265.&mdash;A narrow mind begets obstinacy, and we do not
+easily believe what we cannot see.</p>
+
+<p>["Stiff in opinion, always in the wrong." Dryden, <i>Absalom And
+Achitophel</i>{, line 547}.]</p>
+<a name="266"></a><br>
+<p>266.&mdash;We deceive ourselves if we believe that there are
+violent passions like ambition and love that can triumph over
+others. Idleness, languishing as she is, does not often fail in
+being mistress; she usurps authority over all the plans and
+actions of life; imperceptibly consuming and destroying both
+passions and virtues.</p>
+<a name="267"></a><br>
+<p>267.&mdash;A quickness in believing evil without having
+sufficiently examined it, is the effect of pride and laziness. We
+wish to find the guilty, and we do not wish to trouble ourselves
+in examining the crime.</p>
+<a name="268"></a><br>
+<p>268.&mdash;We credit judges with the meanest motives, and yet
+we desire our reputation and fame should depend upon the judgment
+of men, who are all, either from their jealousy or pre-occupation
+or want of intelligence, opposed to us&mdash;and yet 'tis only to
+make these men decide in our favour that we peril in so many ways
+both our peace and our life.</p>
+<a name="269"></a><br>
+<p>269.&mdash;No man is clever enough to know all the evil he
+does.</p>
+<a name="270"></a><br>
+<p>270.&mdash;One honour won is a surety for more.</p>
+<a name="271"></a><br>
+<p>271.&mdash;Youth is a continual intoxication; it is the fever
+of reason.</p>
+
+<p>["The best of life is but intoxication."&mdash;{Lord Byron, }
+Don Juan{, Canto II, stanza 179}. In the 1st Edition, 1665, the
+maxim finishes with&mdash;"it is the fever of health, the folly
+of reason."]</p>
+<a name="272"></a><br>
+<p>272.&mdash;Nothing should so humiliate men who have deserved
+great praise, as the care they have taken to acquire it by the
+smallest means.</p>
+<a name="273"></a><br>
+<p>273.&mdash;There are persons of whom the world approves who
+have no merit beyond the vices they use in the affairs of
+life.</p>
+<a name="274"></a><br>
+<p>274.&mdash;The beauty of novelty is to love as the flower to
+the fruit; it lends a lustre which is easily lost, but which
+never returns.</p>
+<a name="275"></a><br>
+<p>275.&mdash;Natural goodness, which boasts of being so
+apparent, is often smothered by the least interest.</p>
+<a name="276"></a><br>
+<p>276.&mdash;Absence extinguishes small passions and increases
+great ones, as the wind will blow out a candle, and blow in a
+fire.</p>
+<a name="277"></a><br>
+<p>277.&mdash;Women often think they love when they do not love.
+The business of a love affair, the emotion of mind that sentiment
+induces, the natural bias towards the pleasure of being loved,
+the difficulty of refusing, persuades them that they have real
+passion when they have but flirtation.</p>
+
+<p>["And if in fact she takes a {"}<i>Grande Passion</i>{"}, It is a
+very serious thing indeed: Nine times in ten 'tis but caprice or
+fashion, Coquetry, or a wish to take the lead, The pride of a
+mere child with a new sash on. Or wish to make a rival's bosom
+bleed: But the {<i>Tenth</i>} instance will be a tornado, For there's no
+saying what they will or may do." {&mdash;Lord Byron, }<i>Don Juan</i>,
+canto xii. stanza 77.]</p>
+<a name="278"></a><br>
+<p>278.&mdash;What makes us so often discontented with those who
+transact business for us is that they almost always abandon the
+interest of their friends for the interest of the business,
+because they wish to have the honour of succeeding in that which
+they have undertaken.</p>
+<a name="279"></a><br>
+<p>279.&mdash;When we exaggerate the tenderness of our friends
+towards us, it is often less from gratitude than from a desire to
+exhibit our own merit.</p>
+<a name="280"></a><br>
+<p>280.&mdash;The praise we give to new comers into the world
+arises from the envy we bear to those who are established.</p>
+<a name="281"></a><br>
+<p>281.&mdash;Pride, which inspires, often serves to moderate
+envy.</p>
+<a name="282"></a><br>
+<p>282.&mdash;Some disguised lies so resemble truth, that we
+should judge badly were we not deceived.</p>
+<a name="283"></a><br>
+<p>283.&mdash;Sometimes there is not less ability in knowing how
+to use than in giving good advice.</p>
+<a name="284"></a><br>
+<p>284.&mdash;There are wicked people who would be much less
+dangerous if they were wholly without goodness.</p>
+<a name="285"></a><br>
+<p>285.&mdash;Magnanimity is sufficiently defined by its name,
+nevertheless one can say it is the good sense of pride, the most
+noble way of receiving praise.</p>
+<a name="286"></a><br>
+<p>286.&mdash;It is impossible to love a second time those whom
+we have really ceased to love.</p>
+<a name="287"></a><br>
+<p>287.&mdash;Fertility of mind does not furnish us with so many
+resources on the same matter, as the lack of intelligence makes
+us hesitate at each thing our imagination presents, and hinders
+us from at first discerning which is the best.</p>
+<a name="288"></a><br>
+<p>288.&mdash;There are matters and maladies which at certain
+times remedies only serve to make worse; true skill consists in
+knowing when it is dangerous to use them.</p>
+<a name="289"></a><br>
+<p>289.&mdash;Affected simplicity is refined imposture.</p>
+
+<p>[Domitianus simplicitatis ac modestiae imagine studium
+litterarum et amorem carminum simulabat quo velaret animum et
+fratris aemulationi subduceretur.&mdash;Tacitus, <i>Ann.</i> iv.]</p>
+<a name="290"></a><br>
+<p>290.&mdash;There are as many errors of temper as of mind.</p>
+<a name="291"></a><br>
+<p>291.&mdash;Man's merit, like the crops, has its season.</p>
+<a name="292"></a><br>
+<p>292.&mdash;One may say of temper as of many buildings; it has
+divers aspects, some agreeable, others disagreeable.</p>
+<a name="293"></a><br>
+<p>293.&mdash;Moderation cannot claim the merit of opposing and
+overcoming Ambition: they are never found together. Moderation is
+the languor and sloth of the soul, Ambition its activity and
+heat.</p>
+<a name="294"></a><br>
+<p>294.&mdash;We always like those who admire us, we do not
+always like those whom we admire.</p>
+<a name="295"></a><br>
+<p>295.&mdash;It is well that we know not all our wishes.</p>
+<a name="296"></a><br>
+<p>296.&mdash;It is difficult to love those we do not esteem, but
+it is no less so to love those whom we esteem much more than
+ourselves.</p>
+<a name="297"></a><br>
+<p>297.&mdash;Bodily temperaments have a common course and rule
+which imperceptibly affect our will. They advance in combination,
+and successively exercise a secret empire over us, so that,
+without our perceiving it, they become a great part of all our
+actions.</p>
+<a name="298"></a><br>
+<p>298.&mdash;The gratitude of most men is but a secret desire of
+receiving greater benefits.</p>
+
+<p>[Hence the common proverb "Gratitude is merely a lively sense
+of favors to come."]</p>
+<a name="299"></a><br>
+<p>299.&mdash;Almost all the world takes pleasure in paying small
+debts; many people show gratitude for trifling, but there is
+hardly one who does not show ingratitude for great favours.</p>
+<a name="300"></a><br>
+<p>300.&mdash;There are follies as catching as infections.</p>
+<a name="301"></a><br>
+<p>301.&mdash;Many people despise, but few know how to bestow
+wealth.</p>
+<a name="302"></a><br>
+<p>302.&mdash;Only in things of small value we usually are bold
+enough not to trust to appearances.</p>
+<a name="303"></a><br>
+<p>303.&mdash;Whatever good quality may be imputed to us, we
+ourselves find nothing new in it.</p>
+<a name="304"></a><br>
+<p>304.&mdash;We may forgive those who bore us, we cannot forgive
+those whom we bore.</p>
+<a name="305"></a><br>
+<p>305.&mdash;Interest which is accused of all our misdeeds often
+should be praised for our good deeds.</p>
+<a name="306"></a><br>
+<p>306.&mdash;We find very few ungrateful people when we are able
+to confer favours.</p>
+<a name="307"></a><br>
+<p>307.&mdash;It is as proper to be boastful alone as it is
+ridiculous to be so in company.</p>
+<a name="308"></a><br>
+<p>308.&mdash;Moderation is made a virtue to limit the ambition
+of the great; to console ordinary people for their small fortune
+and equally small ability.</p>
+<a name="309"></a><br>
+<p>309.&mdash;There are persons fated to be fools, who commit
+follies not only by choice, but who are forced by fortune to do
+so.</p>
+<a name="310"></a><br>
+<p>310.&mdash;Sometimes there are accidents in our life the
+skilful extrication from which demands a little folly.</p>
+<a name="311"></a><br>
+<p>311.&mdash;If there be men whose folly has never appeared, it
+is because it has never been closely looked for.</p>
+<a name="312"></a><br>
+<p>312.&mdash;Lovers are never tired of each other,&mdash;they
+always speak of themselves.</p>
+<a name="313"></a><br>
+<p>313.&mdash;How is it that our memory is good enough to retain
+the least triviality that happens to us, and yet not good enough
+to recollect how often we have told it to the same person?</p>
+
+<p>["Old men who yet retain the memory of things past, and forget
+how often they have told them, are most tedious
+companions."&mdash;Montaigne, {<i>Essays</i>, Book I, Chapter IX}.]</p>
+<a name="314"></a><br>
+<p>314.&mdash;The extreme delight we take in talking of ourselves
+should warn us that it is not shared by those who listen.</p>
+<a name="315"></a><br>
+<p>315.&mdash;What commonly hinders us from showing the recesses
+of our heart to our friends, is not the distrust we have of them,
+but that we have of ourselves.</p>
+<a name="316"></a><br>
+<p>316.&mdash;Weak persons cannot be sincere.</p>
+<a name="317"></a><br>
+<p>317.&mdash;'Tis a small misfortune to oblige an ungrateful
+man; but it is unbearable to be obliged by a scoundrel.</p>
+<a name="318"></a><br>
+<p>318.&mdash;We may find means to cure a fool of his folly, but
+there are none to set straight a cross-grained spirit.</p>
+<a name="319"></a><br>
+<p>319.&mdash;If we take the liberty to dwell on their faults we
+cannot long preserve the feelings we should hold towards our
+friends and benefactors.</p>
+<a name="320"></a><br>
+<p>320.&mdash;To praise princes for virtues they do not possess
+is but to reproach them with impunity.</p>
+
+<p>["Praise undeserved is satire in disguise," quoted by Pope
+from a poem which has not survived, "The Garland," by Mr.
+Broadhurst. "In some cases exaggerated or inappropriate praise
+becomes the most severe satire."&mdash; Scott, <i>Woodstock.</i>]</p>
+<a name="321"></a><br>
+<p>321.&mdash;We are nearer loving those who hate us, than those
+who love us more than we desire.</p>
+<a name="322"></a><br>
+<p>322.&mdash;Those only are despicable who fear to be
+despised.</p>
+<a name="323"></a><br>
+<p>323.&mdash;Our wisdom is no less at the mercy of Fortune than
+our goods.</p>
+<a name="324"></a><br>
+<p>324.&mdash;There is more self-love than love in jealousy.</p>
+<a name="325"></a><br>
+<p>325.&mdash;We often comfort ourselves by the weakness of
+evils, for which reason has not the strength to console us.</p>
+<a name="326"></a><br>
+<p>326.&mdash;Ridicule dishonours more than dishonour itself.</p>
+
+<p>["No," says a commentator, "Ridicule may do harm, but it
+cannot dishonour; it is vice which confers dishonour."]</p>
+<a name="327"></a><br>
+<p>327.&mdash;We own to small faults to persuade others that we
+have not great ones.</p>
+<a name="328"></a><br>
+<p>328.&mdash;Envy is more irreconcilable than hatred.</p>
+<a name="329"></a><br>
+<p>329.&mdash;We believe, sometimes, that we hate flattery
+&mdash;we only dislike the method.</p>
+
+<p>["{But} when I tell him he hates flatter{ers}, He says he
+does, being then most flattered." Shakespeare, <i>Julius Caesar</i>
+{,Act II, Scene I, Decius}.]</p>
+<a name="330"></a><br>
+<p>330.&mdash;We pardon in the degree that we love.</p>
+<a name="331"></a><br>
+<p>331.&mdash;It is more difficult to be faithful to a mistress
+when one is happy, than when we are ill-treated by her.</p>
+
+<p>[Si qua volet regnare diu contemnat amantem.&mdash;Ovid,
+<i>Amores,</i> ii. 19.]</p>
+<a name="332"></a><br>
+<p>332.&mdash;Women do not know all their powers of
+flirtation.</p>
+<a name="333"></a><br>
+<p>333.&mdash;Women cannot be completely severe unless they
+hate.</p>
+<a name="334"></a><br>
+<p>334.&mdash;Women can less easily resign flirtations than
+love.</p>
+<a name="335"></a><br>
+<p>335.&mdash;In love deceit almost always goes further than
+mistrust.</p>
+<a name="336"></a><br>
+<p>336.&mdash;There is a kind of love, the excess of which
+forbids jealousy.</p>
+<a name="337"></a><br>
+<p>337.&mdash;There are certain good qualities as there are
+senses, and those who want them can neither perceive nor
+understand them.</p>
+<a name="338"></a><br>
+<p>338.&mdash;When our hatred is too bitter it places us below
+those whom we hate.</p>
+<a name="339"></a><br>
+<p>339.&mdash;We only appreciate our good or evil in proportion
+to our self-love.</p>
+<a name="340"></a><br>
+<p>340.&mdash;The wit of most women rather strengthens their
+folly than their reason.</p>
+
+<p>["Women have an entertaining tattle, and sometimes wit, but
+for solid reasoning and good sense I never knew one in my life
+that had it, and who reasoned and acted consequentially for four
+and twenty hours together."&mdash;Lord Chesterfield, <i>Letter</i>
+129.]</p>
+<a name="341"></a><br>
+<p>341.&mdash;The heat of youth is not more opposed to safety
+than the coldness of age.</p>
+<a name="342"></a><br>
+<p>342.&mdash;The accent of our native country dwells in the
+heart and mind as well as on the tongue.</p>
+<a name="343"></a><br>
+<p>343.&mdash;To be a great man one should know how to profit by
+every phase of fortune.</p>
+<a name="344"></a><br>
+<p>344.&mdash;Most men, like plants, possess hidden qualities
+which chance discovers.</p>
+<a name="345"></a><br>
+<p>345.&mdash;Opportunity makes us known to others, but more to
+ourselves.</p>
+<a name="346"></a><br>
+<p>346.&mdash;If a woman's temper is beyond control there can be
+no control of the mind or heart.</p>
+<a name="347"></a><br>
+<p>347.&mdash;We hardly find any persons of good sense, save
+those who agree with us.</p>
+
+<p>["That was excellently observed, say I, when I read an author
+when his opinion agrees with mine."&mdash;Swift, <i>Thoughts On
+Various Subjects.</i>]</p>
+<a name="348"></a><br>
+<p>348.&mdash;When one loves one doubts even what one most
+believes.</p>
+<a name="349"></a><br>
+<p>349.&mdash;The greatest miracle of love is to eradicate
+flirtation.</p>
+<a name="350"></a><br>
+<p>350.&mdash;Why we hate with so much bitterness those who
+deceive us is because they think themselves more clever than we
+are.</p>
+
+<p>["I could pardon all his (Louis XI.'s) deceit, but I cannot
+forgive his supposing me capable of the gross folly of being
+duped by his professions."&mdash;Sir Walter Scott, <i>Quentin
+Durward.</i>]</p>
+<a name="351"></a><br>
+<p>351.&mdash;We have much trouble to break with one, when we no
+longer are in love.</p>
+<a name="352"></a><br>
+<p>352.&mdash;We almost always are bored with persons with whom
+we should not be bored.</p>
+<a name="353"></a><br>
+<p>353.&mdash;A gentleman may love like a lunatic, but not like a
+beast.</p>
+<a name="354"></a><br>
+<p>354.&mdash;There are certain defects which well mounted
+glitter like virtue itself.</p>
+<a name="355"></a><br>
+<p>355.&mdash;Sometimes we lose friends for whose loss our regret
+is greater than our grief, and others for whom our grief is
+greater than our regret.</p>
+<a name="356"></a><br>
+<p>356.&mdash;Usually we only praise heartily those who admire
+us.</p>
+<a name="357"></a><br>
+<p>357.&mdash;Little minds are too much wounded by little things;
+great minds see all and are not even hurt.</p>
+<a name="358"></a><br>
+<p>358.&mdash;Humility is the true proof of Christian virtues;
+without it we retain all our faults, and they are only covered by
+pride to hide them from others, and often from ourselves.</p>
+<a name="359"></a><br>
+<p>359.&mdash;Infidelities should extinguish love, and we ought
+not to be jealous when we have cause to be so. No persons escape
+causing jealousy who are worthy of exciting it.</p>
+<a name="360"></a><br>
+<p>360.&mdash;We are more humiliated by the least infidelity
+towards us, than by our greatest towards others.</p>
+<a name="361"></a><br>
+<p>361.&mdash;Jealousy is always born with love, but does not
+always die with it.</p>
+<a name="362"></a><br>
+<p>362.&mdash;Most women do not grieve so much for the death of
+their lovers for love's-sake, as to show they were worthy of
+being beloved.</p>
+<a name="363"></a><br>
+<p>363.&mdash;The evils we do to others give us less pain than
+those we do to ourselves.</p>
+<a name="364"></a><br>
+<p>364.&mdash;We well know that it is bad taste to talk of our
+wives; but we do not so well know that it is the same to speak of
+ourselves.</p>
+<a name="365"></a><br>
+<p>365.&mdash;There are virtues which degenerate into vices when
+they arise from Nature, and others which when acquired are never
+perfect. For example, reason must teach us to manage our estate
+and our confidence, while Nature should have given us goodness
+and valour.</p>
+<a name="366"></a><br>
+<p>366.&mdash;However we distrust the sincerity of those whom we
+talk with, we always believe them more sincere with us than with
+others.</p>
+<a name="367"></a><br>
+<p>367.&mdash;There are few virtuous women who are not tired of
+their part.</p>
+
+<p>["Every woman is at heart a rake."-&ndash;Pope. <i>Moral Essays,</i>
+ii.]</p>
+<a name="368"></a><br>
+<p>368.&mdash;The greater number of good women are like concealed
+treasures, safe as no one has searched for them.</p>
+<a name="369"></a><br>
+<p>369.&mdash;The violences we put upon ourselves to escape love
+are often more cruel than the cruelty of those we love.</p>
+<a name="370"></a><br>
+<p>370.&mdash;There are not many cowards who know the whole of
+their fear.</p>
+<a name="371"></a><br>
+<p>371.&mdash;It is generally the fault of the loved one not to
+perceive when love ceases.</p>
+<a name="372"></a><br>
+<p>372.&mdash;Most young people think they are natural when they
+are only boorish and rude.</p>
+<a name="373"></a><br>
+<p>373.&mdash;Some tears after having deceived others deceive
+ourselves.</p>
+<a name="374"></a><br>
+<p>374.&mdash;If we think we love a woman for love of herself we
+are greatly deceived.</p>
+<a name="375"></a><br>
+<p>375.&mdash;Ordinary men commonly condemn what is beyond
+them.</p>
+<a name="376"></a><br>
+<p>376.&mdash;Envy is destroyed by true friendship, flirtation by
+true love.</p>
+<a name="377"></a><br>
+<p>377.&mdash;The greatest mistake of penetration is not to have
+fallen short, but to have gone too far.</p>
+<a name="378"></a><br>
+<p>378.&mdash;We may bestow advice, but we cannot inspire the
+conduct.</p>
+<a name="379"></a><br>
+<p>379.&mdash;As our merit declines so also does our taste.</p>
+<a name="380"></a><br>
+<p>380.&mdash;Fortune makes visible our virtues or our vices, as
+light does objects.</p>
+<a name="381"></a><br>
+<p>381.&mdash;The struggle we undergo to remain faithful to one
+we love is little better than infidelity.</p>
+<a name="382"></a><br>
+<p>382.&mdash;Our actions are like the rhymed ends of blank
+verses (<i>Bouts-Rim&eacute;s</i>) where to each one puts what
+construction he pleases.</p>
+
+<p>[The <i>Bouts-Rim&eacute;s</i> was a literary game popular in the
+17th and 18th centuries&mdash;the rhymed words at the end of a
+line being given for others to fill up. Thus Horace Walpole being
+given, "brook, why, crook, I," returned the burlesque
+verse&mdash; "I sits with my toes in a <i>Brook</i>, And if any one axes
+me <i>Why?</i> I gies 'em a rap with my <i>Crook,</i> 'Tis constancy makes me,
+ses I."]</p>
+<a name="383"></a><br>
+<p>383.&mdash;The desire of talking about ourselves, and of
+putting our faults in the light we wish them to be seen, forms a
+great part of our sincerity.</p>
+<a name="384"></a><br>
+<p>384.&mdash;We should only be astonished at still being able to
+be astonished.</p>
+<a name="385"></a><br>
+<p>385.&mdash;It is equally as difficult to be contented when one
+has too much or too little love.</p>
+<a name="386"></a><br>
+<p>386.&mdash;No people are more often wrong than those who will
+not allow themselves to be wrong.</p>
+<a name="387"></a><br>
+<p>387.&mdash;A fool has not stuff in him to be good.</p>
+<a name="388"></a><br>
+<p>388.&mdash;If vanity does not overthrow all virtues, at least
+she makes them totter.</p>
+<a name="389"></a><br>
+<p>389.&mdash;What makes the vanity of others unsupportable is
+that it wounds our own.</p>
+<a name="390"></a><br>
+<p>390.&mdash;We give up more easily our interest than our
+taste.</p>
+<a name="391"></a><br>
+<p>391.&mdash;Fortune appears so blind to none as to those to
+whom she has done no good.</p>
+<a name="392"></a><br>
+<p>392.&mdash;We should manage fortune like our health, enjoy it
+when it is good, be patient when it is bad, and never resort to
+strong remedies but in an extremity.</p>
+<a name="393"></a><br>
+<p>393.&mdash;Awkwardness sometimes disappears in the camp, never
+in the court.</p>
+<a name="394"></a><br>
+<p>394.&mdash;A man is often more clever than one other, but not
+than all others.</p>
+
+<p>["Singuli decipere ac decipi possunt, nemo omnes, omnes
+neminem fefellerunt."&mdash;Pliny{ the Younger, <i>Panegyricus,</i>
+LXII}.]</p>
+<a name="395"></a><br>
+<p>395.&mdash;We are often less unhappy at being deceived by one
+we loved, than on being deceived.</p>
+<a name="396"></a><br>
+<p>396.&mdash;We keep our first lover for a long time&mdash;if we
+do not get a second.</p>
+<a name="397"></a><br>
+<p>397.&mdash;We have not the courage to say generally that we
+have no faults, and that our enemies have no good qualities; but
+in fact we are not far from believing so.</p>
+<a name="398"></a><br>
+<p>398.&mdash;Of all our faults that which we most readily admit
+is idleness: we believe that it makes all virtues ineffectual,
+and that without utterly destroying, it at least suspends their
+operation.</p>
+<a name="399"></a><br>
+<p>399.&mdash;There is a kind of greatness which does not depend
+upon fortune: it is a certain manner what distinguishes us, and
+which seems to destine us for great things; it is the value we
+insensibly set upon ourselves; it is by this quality that we gain
+the deference of other men, and it is this which commonly raises
+us more above them, than birth, rank, or even merit itself.</p>
+<a name="400"></a><br>
+<p>400.&mdash;There may be talent without position, but there is
+no position without some kind of talent.</p>
+<a name="401"></a><br>
+<p>401.&mdash;Rank is to merit what dress is to a pretty
+woman.</p>
+<a name="402"></a><br>
+<p>402.&mdash;What we find the least of in flirtation is
+love.</p>
+<a name="403"></a><br>
+<p>403.&mdash;Fortune sometimes uses our faults to exalt us, and
+there are tiresome people whose deserts would be ill rewarded if
+we did not desire to purchase their absence.</p>
+<a name="404"></a><br>
+<p>404.&mdash;It appears that nature has hid at the bottom of our
+hearts talents and abilities unknown to us. It is only the
+passions that have the power of bringing them to light, and
+sometimes give us views more true and more perfect than art could
+possibly do.</p>
+<a name="405"></a><br>
+<p>405.&mdash;We reach quite inexperienced the different stages
+of life, and often, in spite of the number of our years, we lack
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>["To most men experience is like the stern lights of a ship
+which illumine only the track it has passed."&mdash;
+Coleridge.]</p>
+<a name="406"></a><br>
+<p>406.&mdash;Flirts make it a point of honour to be jealous of
+their lovers, to conceal their envy of other women.</p>
+<a name="407"></a><br>
+<p>407.&mdash;It may well be that those who have trapped us by
+their tricks do not seem to us so foolish as we seem to ourselves
+when trapped by the tricks of others.</p>
+<a name="408"></a><br>
+<p>408.&mdash;The most dangerous folly of old persons who have
+been loveable is to forget that they are no longer so.</p>
+
+<p>["Every woman who is not absolutely ugly thinks herself
+handsome. The suspicion of age no woman, let her be ever so old,
+forgives."&mdash;Lord Chesterfield, <i>Letter</i> 129.]</p>
+<a name="409"></a><br>
+<p>409.&mdash;We should often be ashamed of our very best actions
+if the world only saw the motives which caused them.</p>
+<a name="410"></a><br>
+<p>410.&mdash;The greatest effort of friendship is not to show
+our faults to a friend, but to show him his own.</p>
+<a name="411"></a><br>
+<p>4ll.&mdash;We have few faults which are not far more excusable
+than the means we adopt to hide them.</p>
+<a name="412"></a><br>
+<p>412.&mdash;Whatever disgrace we may have deserved, it is
+almost always in our power to re-establish our character.</p>
+
+<p>["This is hardly a period at which the most irregular
+character may not be redeemed. The mistakes of one sin find a
+retreat in patriotism, those of the other in devotion." &mdash;Junius,
+<i>Letter To The King</i>.]</p>
+<a name="413"></a><br>
+<p>413.&mdash;A man cannot please long who has only one kind of
+wit.</p>
+
+<p>[According to Segrais this maxim was a hit at Racine and
+Boileau, who, despising ordinary conversation, talked incessantly
+of literature; but there is some doubt as to Segrais'
+statement.&mdash;Aim&eacute; Martin.]</p>
+<a name="414"></a><br>
+<p>414.&mdash;Idiots and lunatics see only their own wit.</p>
+
+<p>415.&mdash;Wit sometimes enables us to act rudely with
+impunity.</p>
+<a name="415"></a><br>
+<p>416.&mdash;The vivacity which increases in old age is not far
+removed from folly.</p>
+<a name="416"></a><br>
+<p>["How ill {white} hairs become {a} fool and jester."&mdash;
+Shakespeare{, King Henry IV, Part II, Act. V, Scene V, King}.</p>
+
+<p>"Can age itself forget that you are now in the last act of
+life? Can grey hairs make folly venerable, and is there no period
+to be reserved for meditation or retirement."&mdash; Junius, <i>To
+The Duke Of Bedford</i>, 19th Sept. 1769.]</p>
+<a name="417"></a><br>
+<p>417.&mdash;In love the quickest is always the best cure.</p>
+<a name="418"></a><br>
+<p>418.&mdash;Young women who do not want to appear flirts, and
+old men who do not want to appear ridiculous, should not talk of
+love as a matter wherein they can have any interest.</p>
+<a name="419"></a><br>
+<p>419.&mdash;We may seem great in a post beneath our capacity,
+but we oftener seem little in a post above it.</p>
+<a name="420"></a><br>
+<p>420.&mdash;We often believe we have constancy in misfortune
+when we have nothing but debasement, and we suffer misfortunes
+without regarding them as cowards who let themselves be killed
+from fear of defending themselves.</p>
+<a name="421"></a><br>
+<p>421.&mdash;Conceit causes more conversation than wit.</p>
+<a name="422"></a><br>
+<p>422.&mdash;All passions make us commit some faults, love alone
+makes us ridiculous.</p>
+
+<p>["In love we all are fools alike."&mdash;Gay{,<i> The Beggar's
+Opera,</i> (1728), Act III, Scene I, Lucy}.]</p>
+<a name="423"></a><br>
+<p>423.&mdash;Few know how to be old.</p>
+<a name="424"></a><br>
+<p>424.&mdash;We often credit ourselves with vices the reverse of
+what we have, thus when weak we boast of our obstinacy.</p>
+<a name="425"></a><br>
+<p>425.&mdash;Penetration has a spice of divination in it which
+tickles our vanity more than any other quality of the mind.</p>
+<a name="426"></a><br>
+<p>426.&mdash;The charm of novelty and old custom, however
+opposite to each other, equally blind us to the faults of our
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>["Two things the most opposite blind us equally, custom and
+novelty."-La Bruy&egrave;re, <i>Des Judgements.</i>]</p>
+<a name="427"></a><br>
+<p>427.&mdash;Most friends sicken us of friendship, most devotees
+of devotion.</p>
+<a name="428"></a><br>
+<p>428.&mdash;We easily forgive in our friends those faults we do
+not perceive.</p>
+<a name="429"></a><br>
+<p>429.&mdash;Women who love, pardon more readily great
+indiscretions than little infidelities.</p>
+<a name="430"></a><br>
+<p>430.&mdash;In the old age of love as in life we still survive
+for the evils, though no longer for the pleasures.</p>
+
+<p>["The youth of friendship is better than its old age."
+&mdash;Hazlitt's <i>Characteristics,</i> 229.]</p>
+<a name="431"></a><br>
+<p>431.&mdash;Nothing prevents our being unaffected so much as
+our desire to seem so.</p>
+<a name="432"></a><br>
+<p>432.&mdash;To praise good actions heartily is in some measure
+to take part in them.</p>
+<a name="433"></a><br>
+<p>433.&mdash;The most certain sign of being born with great
+qualities is to be born without envy.</p>
+
+<p>["Nemo alienae virtuti invidet qui satis confidet suae."
+&mdash;Cicero <i>In Marc Ant.</i>]</p>
+<a name="434"></a><br>
+<p>434.&mdash;When our friends have deceived us we owe them but
+indifference to the tokens of their friendship, yet for their
+misfortunes we always owe them pity.</p>
+<a name="435"></a><br>
+<p>435.&mdash;Luck and temper rule the world.</p>
+<a name="436"></a><br>
+<p>436.&mdash;It is far easier to know men than to know man.</p>
+<a name="437"></a><br>
+<p>437.&mdash;We should not judge of a man's merit by his great
+abilities, but by the use he makes of them.</p>
+<a name="438"></a><br>
+<p>438.&mdash;There is a certain lively gratitude which not only
+releases us from benefits received, but which also, by making a
+return to our friends as payment, renders them indebted to
+us.</p>
+
+<p>["And understood not that a grateful mind, By owing owes not,
+but is at once Indebted and discharged." Milton. <i>Paradise
+Lost.</i>]</p>
+<a name="439"></a><br>
+<p>439.&mdash;We should earnestly desire but few things if we
+clearly knew what we desired.</p>
+<a name="440"></a><br>
+<p>440.&mdash;The cause why the majority of women are so little
+given to friendship is, that it is insipid after having felt
+love.</p>
+
+<p>["Those who have experienced a great passion neglect
+friendship, and those who have united themselves to friendship
+have nought to do with love."&mdash;La Bruy&egrave;re. <i>Du
+Coeur.</i>]</p>
+<a name="441"></a><br>
+<p>441.&mdash;As in friendship so in love, we are often happier
+from ignorance than from knowledge.</p>
+<a name="442"></a><br>
+<p>442.&mdash;We try to make a virtue of vices we are loth to
+correct.</p>
+<a name="443"></a><br>
+<p>443.&mdash;The most violent passions give some respite, but
+vanity always disturbs us.</p>
+<a name="444"></a><br>
+<p>444.&mdash;Old fools are more foolish than young fools.</p>
+
+<p>["<i>Malvolio.</i> Infirmity{,} that decays the wise{,} doth eve{r}
+make the better fool. <i>Clown.</i> God send you, sir, a speedy
+infirmity{,} for the better increasing of your
+folly."&mdash;Shakespeare. <i>Twelfth Night</i>{, Act I, Scene V}.]</p>
+<a name="445"></a><br>
+<p>445.&mdash;Weakness is more hostile to virtue than vice.</p>
+<a name="446"></a><br>
+<p>446.&mdash;What makes the grief of shame and jealousy so acute
+is that vanity cannot aid us in enduring them.</p>
+<a name="447"></a><br>
+<p>447.&mdash;Propriety is the least of all laws, but the most
+obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>[Honour has its supreme laws, to which education is bound to
+conform....Those things which honour forbids are more rigorously
+forbidden when the laws do not concur in the prohibition, and
+those it commands are more strongly insisted upon when they
+happen not to be commanded by law.&mdash;Montesquieu, {<i>The Spirit
+Of Laws,</i> }b. 4, c. ii.]</p>
+<a name="448"></a><br>
+<p>448.&mdash;A well-trained mind has less difficulty in
+submitting to than in guiding an ill-trained mind.</p>
+<a name="449"></a><br>
+<p>449.&mdash;When fortune surprises us by giving us some great
+office without having gradually led us to expect it, or without
+having raised our hopes, it is well nigh impossible to occupy it
+well, and to appear worthy to fill it.</p>
+<a name="450"></a><br>
+<p>450.&mdash;Our pride is often increased by what we retrench
+from our other faults.</p>
+
+<p>["The loss of sensual pleasures was supplied and compensated
+by spiritual pride."&mdash;Gibbon. <i>Decline And Fall,</i> chap.
+xv.]</p>
+<a name="451"></a><br>
+<p>451.&mdash;No fools so wearisome as those who have some
+wit.</p>
+<a name="452"></a><br>
+<p>452.&mdash;No one believes that in every respect he is behind
+the man he considers the ablest in the world.</p>
+<a name="453"></a><br>
+<p>453.&mdash;In great matters we should not try so much to
+create opportunities as to utilise those that offer
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>[Yet Lord Bacon says "A wise man will make more opportunities
+than he finds."&mdash;Essays, {(1625), "Of Ceremonies and
+Respects"}]</p>
+<a name="454"></a><br>
+<p>454.&mdash;There are few occasions when we should make a bad
+bargain by giving up the good on condition that no ill was said
+of us.</p>
+<a name="455"></a><br>
+<p>455.&mdash;However disposed the world may be to judge wrongly,
+it far oftener favours false merit than does justice to true.</p>
+<a name="456"></a><br>
+<p>456.&mdash;Sometimes we meet a fool with wit, never one with
+discretion.</p>
+<a name="457"></a><br>
+<p>457.&mdash;We should gain more by letting the world see what
+we are than by trying to seem what we are not.</p>
+<a name="458"></a><br>
+<p>458.&mdash;Our enemies come nearer the truth in the opinions
+they form of us than we do in our opinion of ourselves.</p>
+<a name="459"></a><br>
+<p>459.&mdash;There are many remedies to cure love, yet none are
+infallible.</p>
+<a name="460"></a><br>
+<p>460.&mdash;It would be well for us if we knew all our passions
+make us do.</p>
+<a name="461"></a><br>
+<p>461.&mdash;Age is a tyrant who forbids at the penalty of life
+all the pleasures of youth.</p>
+<a name="462"></a><br>
+<p>462.&mdash;The same pride which makes us blame faults from
+which we believe ourselves free causes us to despise the good
+qualities we have not.</p>
+<a name="463"></a><br>
+<p>463.&mdash;There is often more pride than goodness in our
+grief for our enemies' miseries; it is to show how superior we
+are to them, that we bestow on them the sign of our
+compassion.</p>
+<a name="464"></a><br>
+<p>464.&mdash;There exists an excess of good and evil which
+surpasses our comprehension.</p>
+<a name="465"></a><br>
+<p>465.&mdash;Innocence is most fortunate if it finds the same
+protection as crime.</p>
+<a name="466"></a><br>
+<p>466.&mdash;Of all the violent passions the one that becomes a
+woman best is love.</p>
+<a name="467"></a><br>
+<p>467.&mdash;Vanity makes us sin more against our taste than
+reason.</p>
+<a name="468"></a><br>
+<p>468.&mdash;Some bad qualities form great talents.</p>
+<a name="469"></a><br>
+<p>469.&mdash;We never desire earnestly what we desire in
+reason.</p>
+<a name="470"></a><br>
+<p>470.&mdash;All our qualities are uncertain and doubtful, both
+the good as well as the bad, and nearly all are creatures of
+opportunities.</p>
+<a name="471"></a><br>
+<p>471.&mdash;In their first passion women love their lovers, in
+all the others they love love.</p>
+
+<p>["In her first passion woman loves her lover, In all her
+others what she loves is love." {&mdash;Lord Byron, }Don Juan,
+Canto iii., stanza 3. "We truly love once, the first time; the
+subsequent passions are more or less involuntary." La
+Bruy&egrave;re: <i>Du Coeur</i>.]</p>
+<a name="472"></a><br>
+<p>472.&mdash;Pride as the other passions has its follies. We are
+ashamed to own we are jealous, and yet we plume ourselves in
+having been and being able to be so.</p>
+<a name="473"></a><br>
+<p>473.&mdash;However rare true love is, true friendship is
+rarer.</p>
+
+<p>["It is more common to see perfect love than real friend-
+ship."&mdash;La Bruy&egrave;re. <i>Du Coeur.</i>]</p>
+<a name="474"></a><br>
+<p>474.&mdash;There are few women whose charm survives their
+beauty.</p>
+<a name="475"></a><br>
+<p>475.&mdash;The desire to be pitied or to be admired often
+forms the greater part of our confidence.</p>
+<a name="476"></a><br>
+<p>476.&mdash;Our envy always lasts longer than the happiness of
+those we envy.</p>
+<a name="477"></a><br>
+<p>477.&mdash;The same firmness that enables us to resist love
+enables us to make our resistance durable and lasting. So weak
+persons who are always excited by passions are seldom really
+possessed of any.</p>
+<a name="478"></a><br>
+<p>478.&mdash;Fancy does not enable us to invent so many
+different contradictions as there are by nature in every
+heart.</p>
+<a name="479"></a><br>
+<p>479.&mdash;It is only people who possess firmness who can
+possess true gentleness. In those who appear gentle it is
+generally only weakness, which is readily converted into
+harshness.</p>
+<a name="480"></a><br>
+<p>480.&mdash;Timidity is a fault which is dangerous to blame in
+those we desire to cure of it.</p>
+<a name="481"></a><br>
+<p>481.&mdash;Nothing is rarer than true good nature, those who
+think they have it are generally only pliant or weak.</p>
+<a name="482"></a><br>
+<p>482.&mdash;The mind attaches itself by idleness and habit to
+whatever is easy or pleasant. This habit always places bounds to
+our knowledge, and no one has ever yet taken the pains to enlarge
+and expand his mind to the full extent of its capacities.</p>
+<a name="483"></a><br>
+<p>483.&mdash;Usually we are more satirical from vanity than
+malice.</p>
+<a name="484"></a><br>
+<p>484.&mdash;When the heart is still disturbed by the relics of
+a passion it is proner to take up a new one than when wholly
+cured.</p>
+<a name="485"></a><br>
+<p>485.&mdash;Those who have had great passions often find all
+their lives made miserable in being cured of them.</p>
+<a name="486"></a><br>
+<p>486.&mdash;More persons exist without self-love than without
+envy.</p>
+
+<p>["I do not believe that there is a human creature in his
+senses arrived at maturity, that at some time or other has not
+been carried away by this passion (envy) in good earnest, and yet
+I never met with any who dared own he was guilty of it, but in
+jest."&mdash;Mandeville: <i>Fable Of The Bees</i>; Remark N.]</p>
+<a name="487"></a><br>
+<p>487.&mdash;We have more idleness in the mind than in the
+body.</p>
+<a name="488"></a><br>
+<p>488.&mdash;The calm or disturbance of our mind does not depend
+so much on what we regard as the more important things of life,
+as in a judicious or injudicious arrangement of the little things
+of daily occurrence.</p>
+<a name="489"></a><br>
+<p>489.&mdash;However wicked men may be, they do not dare openly
+to appear the enemies of virtue, and when they desire to
+persecute her they either pretend to believe her false or
+attribute crimes to her.</p>
+<a name="490"></a><br>
+<p>490.&mdash;We often go from love to ambition, but we never
+return from ambition to love.</p>
+
+<p>["Men commence by love, finish by ambition, and do not find a
+quieter seat while they remain there."&mdash;La Bruy&egrave;re:
+<i>Du Coeur</i>.]</p>
+<a name="491"></a><br>
+<p>491.&mdash;Extreme avarice is nearly always mistaken, there is
+no passion which is oftener further away from its mark, nor upon
+which the present has so much power to the prejudice of the
+future.</p>
+<a name="492"></a><br>
+<p>492.&mdash;Avarice often produces opposite results: there are
+an infinite number of persons who sacrifice their property to
+doubtful and distant expectations, others mistake great future
+advantages for small present interests.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Aim&eacute; Martin</i> says, "The author here confuses
+greediness, the desire and avarice&mdash;passions which probably
+have a common origin, but produce different results. The greedy
+man is nearly always desirous to possess, and often foregoes
+great future advantages for small present interests. The
+avaricious man, on the other hand, mistakes present advantages
+for the great expectations of the future. Both desire to possess
+and enjoy. But the miser possesses and enjoys nothing but the
+pleasure of possessing; he risks nothing, gives nothing, hopes
+nothing, his life is centred in his strong box, beyond that he
+has no want."]</p>
+<a name="493"></a><br>
+<p>493.&mdash;It appears that men do not find they have enough
+faults, as they increase the number by certain peculiar qualities
+that they affect to assume, and which they cultivate with so
+great assiduity that at length they become natural faults, which
+they can no longer correct.</p>
+<a name="494"></a><br>
+<p>494.&mdash;What makes us see that men know their faults better
+than we imagine, is that they are never wrong when they speak of
+their conduct; the same self-love that usually blinds them
+enlightens them, and gives them such true views as to make them
+suppress or disguise the smallest thing that might be
+censured.</p>
+<a name="495"></a><br>
+<p>495.&mdash;Young men entering life should be either shy or
+bold; a solemn and sedate manner usually degenerates into
+impertinence.</p>
+<a name="496"></a><br>
+<p>496.&mdash;Quarrels would not last long if the fault was only
+on one side.</p>
+<a name="497"></a><br>
+<p>497.&mdash;It is valueless to a woman to be young unless
+pretty, or to be pretty unless young.</p>
+<a name="498"></a><br>
+<p>498.&mdash;Some persons are so frivolous and fickle that they
+are as far removed from real defects as from substantial
+qualities.</p>
+<a name="499"></a><br>
+<p>499.&mdash;We do not usually reckon a woman's first flirtation
+until she has had a second.</p>
+<a name="500"></a><br>
+<p>500.&mdash;Some people are so self-occupied that when in love
+they find a mode by which to be engrossed with the passion
+without being so with the person they love.</p>
+<a name="501"></a><br>
+<p>501.&mdash;Love, though so very agreeable, pleases more by its
+ways than by itself.</p>
+<a name="502"></a><br>
+<p>502.&mdash;A little wit with good sense bores less in the long
+run than much wit with ill nature.</p>
+<a name="503"></a><br>
+<p>503.&mdash;Jealousy is the worst of all evils, yet the one
+that is least pitied by those who cause it.</p>
+<a name="504"></a><br>
+<p>504.&mdash;Thus having treated of the hollowness of so many
+apparent virtues, it is but just to say something on the
+hollowness of the contempt for death. I allude to that contempt
+of death which the heathen boasted they derived from their
+unaided understanding, without the hope of a future state. There
+is a difference between meeting death with courage and despising
+it. The first is common enough, the last I think always feigned.
+Yet everything that could be has been written to persuade us that
+death is no evil, and the weakest of men, equally with the
+bravest, have given many noble examples on which to found such an
+opinion, still I do not think that any man of good sense has ever
+yet believed in it. And the pains we take to persuade others as
+well as ourselves amply show that the task is far from easy. For
+many reasons we may be disgusted with life, but for none may we
+despise it. Not even those who commit suicide regard it as a
+light matter, and are as much alarmed and startled as the rest of
+the world if death meets them in a different way than the one
+they have selected. The difference we observe in the courage of
+so great a number of brave men, is from meeting death in a way
+different from what they imagined, when it shows itself nearer at
+one time than at another. Thus it ultimately happens that having
+despised death when they were ignorant of it, they dread it when
+they become acquainted with it. If we could avoid seeing it with
+all its surroundings, we might perhaps believe that it was not
+the greatest of evils. The wisest and bravest are those who take
+the best means to avoid reflecting on it, as every man who sees
+it in its real light regards it as dreadful. The necessity of
+dying created all the constancy of philosophers. They thought it
+but right to go with a good grace when they could not avoid
+going, and being unable to prolong their lives indefinitely,
+nothing remained but to build an immortal reputation, and to save
+from the general wreck all that could be saved. To put a good
+face upon it, let it suffice, not to say all that we think to
+ourselves, but rely more on our nature than on our fallible
+reason, which might make us think we could approach death with
+indifference. The glory of dying with courage, the hope of being
+regretted, the desire to leave behind us a good reputation, the
+assurance of being enfranchised from the miseries of life and
+being no longer dependent on the wiles of fortune, are resources
+which should not be passed over. But we must not regard them as
+infallible. They should affect us in the same proportion as a
+single shelter affects those who in war storm a fortress. At a
+distance they think it may afford cover, but when near they find
+it only a feeble protection. It is only deceiving ourselves to
+imagine that death, when near, will seem the same as at a
+distance, or that our feelings, which are merely weaknesses, are
+naturally so strong that they will not suffer in an attack of the
+rudest of trials. It is equally as absurd to try the effect of
+self-esteem and to think it will enable us to count as naught
+what will of necessity destroy it. And the mind in which we trust
+to find so many resources will be far too weak in the struggle to
+persuade us in the way we wish. For it is this which betrays us
+so frequently, and which, instead of filling us with contempt of
+death, serves but to show us all that is frightful and fearful.
+The most it can do for us is to persuade us to avert our gaze and
+fix it on other objects. Cato and Brutus each selected noble
+ones. A lackey sometime ago contented himself by dancing on the
+scaffold when he was about to be broken on the wheel. So however
+diverse the motives they but realize the same result. For the
+rest it is a fact that whatever difference there may be between
+the peer and the peasant, we have constantly seen both the one
+and the other meet death with the same composure. Still there is
+always this difference, that the contempt the peer shows for
+death is but the love of fame which hides death from his sight;
+in the peasant it is but the result of his limited vision that
+hides from him the extent of the evil, end leaves him free to
+reflect on other things.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="sup1"></a>
+<br>
+
+
+<h2>THE FIRST SUPPLEMENT</h2>
+
+<p>[The following reflections are extracted from the first two
+editions of La Rochefoucauld, having been suppressed by the
+author in succeeding issues.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="I">I</a>.&mdash;Self-love is the love <i>of</i> self, and of all things <i>for</i>
+self. It makes men self-worshippers, and if fortune permits them,
+causes them to tyrannize over others; it is never quiet when out
+of itself, and only rests upon other subjects as a bee upon
+flowers, to extract from them its proper food. Nothing is so
+headstrong as its desires, nothing so well concealed as its
+designs, nothing so skilful as its management; its suppleness is
+beyond description; its changes surpass those of the
+metamorphoses, its refinements those of chemistry. We can neither
+plumb the depths nor pierce the shades of its recesses. Therein
+it is hidden from the most far-seeing eyes, therein it takes a
+thousand imperceptible folds. There it is often to itself
+invisible; it there conceives, there nourishes and rears, without
+being aware of it, numberless loves and hatreds, some so
+monstrous that when they are brought to light it disowns them,
+and cannot resolve to avow them. In the night which covers it are
+born the ridiculous persuasions it has of itself, thence come its
+errors, its ignorance, its silly mistakes; thence it is led to
+believe that its passions which sleep are dead, and to think that
+it has lost all appetite for that of which it is sated. But this
+thick darkness which conceals it from itself does not hinder it
+from seeing that perfectly which is out of itself; and in this it
+resembles our eyes which behold all, and yet cannot set their own
+forms. In fact, in great concerns and important matters when the
+violence of its desires summons all its attention, it sees,
+feels, hears, imagines, suspects, penetrates, divines all: so
+that we might think that each of its passions had a magic power
+proper to it. Nothing is so close and strong as its attachments,
+which, in sight of the extreme misfortunes which threaten it, it
+vainly attempts to break. Yet sometimes it effects that without
+trouble and quickly, which it failed to do with its whole power
+and in the course of years, whence we may fairly conclude that it
+is by itself that its desires are inflamed, rather than by the
+beauty and merit of its objects, that its own taste embellishes
+and heightens them; that it is itself the game it pursues, and
+that it follows eagerly when it runs after that upon which itself
+is eager. It is made up of contraries. It is imperious and
+obedient, sincere and false, piteous and cruel, timid and bold.
+It has different desires according to the diversity of
+temperaments, which turn and fix it sometimes upon riches,
+sometimes on pleasures. It changes according to our age, our
+fortunes, and our hopes; it is quite indifferent whether it has
+many or one, because it can split itself into many portions, and
+unite in one as it pleases. It is inconstant, and besides the
+changes which arise from strange causes it has an infinity born
+of itself, and of its own substance. It is inconstant through
+inconstancy, of lightness, love, novelty, lassitude and distaste.
+It is capricious, and one sees it sometimes work with intense
+eagerness and with incredible labour to obtain things of little
+use to it which are even hurtful, but which it pursues because it
+wishes for them. It is silly, and often throws its whole
+application on the utmost frivolities. It finds all its pleasure
+in the dullest matters, and places its pride in the most
+contemptible. It is seen in all states of life, and in all
+conditions; it lives everywhere and upon everything; it subsists
+on nothing; it accommodates itself either to things or to the
+want of them; it goes over to those who are at war with it,
+enters into their designs, and, this is wonderful, it, with them,
+hates even itself; it conspires for its own loss, it works
+towards its own ruin&mdash;in fact, caring only to exist, and
+providing that it may <i>be</i>, it will be its own enemy! We must
+therefore not be surprised if it is sometimes united to the
+rudest austerity, and if it enters so boldly into partnership to
+destroy her, because when it is rooted out in one place it
+re-establishes itself in another. When it fancies that it
+abandons its pleasure it merely changes or suspends its
+enjoyment. When even it is conquered in its full flight, we find
+that it triumphs in its own defeat. Here then is the picture of
+self-love whereof the whole of our life is but one long
+agitation. The sea is its living image; and in the flux and
+reflux of its continuous waves there is a faithful expression of
+the stormy succession of its thoughts and of its eternal motion.
+(Edition of 1665, No. 1.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="II">II</a>.&mdash;Passions are only the different degrees of the heat
+or coldness of the blood. (1665, No. 13.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="III">III</a>.&mdash;Moderation in good fortune is but apprehension of
+the shame which follows upon haughtiness, or a fear of losing
+what we have. (1665, No. 18.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="IV">IV</a>.&mdash;Moderation is like temperance in eating; we could
+eat more but we fear to make ourselves ill. (1665, No. 21.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="V">V</a>.&mdash;Everybody finds that to abuse in another which he
+finds worthy of abuse in himself. (1665, No. 33.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="VI">VI</a>.&mdash;Pride, as if tired of its artifices and its
+different metamorphoses, after having solely filled the divers
+parts of the comedy of life, exhibits itself with its natural
+face, and is discovered by haughtiness; so much so that we may
+truly say that haughtiness is but the flash and open declaration
+of pride. (1665, No. 37.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="VII">VII</a>.&mdash;One kind of happiness is to know exactly at what
+point to be miserable. (1665, No. 53.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="VIII">VIII</a>.&mdash;When we do not find peace of mind (REPOS) in
+ourselves it is useless to seek it elsewhere. (1665, No. 53.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="IX">IX</a>.&mdash;One should be able to answer for one's fortune, so
+as to be able to answer for what we shall do. (1665, No. 70.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="X">X</a>.&mdash;Love is to the soul of him who loves, what the soul
+is to the body which it animates. (1665, No. 77.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XI">XI</a>.&mdash;As one is never at liberty to love or to cease from
+loving, the lover cannot with justice complain of the inconstancy
+of his mistress, nor she of the fickleness of her lover. (1665,
+No. 81.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XII">XII</a>.&mdash;Justice in those judges who are moderate is but a
+love of their place. (1665, No. 89.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XIII">XIII</a>.&mdash;When we are tired of loving we are quite content
+if our mistress should become faithless, to loose us from our
+fidelity. (1665, No. 85.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XIV">XIV</a>.&mdash;The first impulse of joy which we feel at the
+happiness of our friends arises neither from our natural goodness
+nor from friendship; it is the result of self-love, which
+flatters us with being lucky in our own turn, or in reaping
+something from the good fortune of our friends. (1665, No.
+97.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XV">XV</a>.&mdash;In the adversity of our best friends we always find
+something which is not wholly displeasing to us. (1665, No.
+99.)</p>
+
+<p>[This gave occasion to Swift's celebrated "Verses on his own
+Death." The four first are quoted opposite the title, then follow
+these lines:&mdash; "This maxim more than all the rest, Is
+thought too base for human breast; In all distresses of our
+friends, We first consult our private ends; While nature kindly
+bent to ease us, Points out some circumstance to please us."</p>
+
+<p>See also Chesterfield's defence of this in his 129th letter;
+"they who know the deception and wickedness of the human heart
+will not be either romantic or blind enough to deny what
+Rochefoucauld and Swift have affirmed as a general truth."]</p>
+
+<p><a name="XVI">XVI</a>.&mdash;How shall we hope that another person will keep our
+secret if we do not keep it ourselves. (1665, No. 100.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XVII">XVII</a>.&mdash;As if it was not sufficient that self-love should
+have the power to change itself, it has added that of changing
+other objects, and this it does in a very astonishing manner; for
+not only does it so well disguise them that it is itself
+deceived, but it even changes the state and nature of things.
+Thus, when a female is adverse to us, and she turns her hate and
+persecution against us, self-love pronounces on her actions with
+all the severity of justice; it exaggerates the faults till they
+are enormous, and looks at her good qualities in so
+disadvantageous a light that they become more displeasing than
+her faults. If however the same female becomes favourable to us,
+or certain of our interests reconcile her to us, our sole self
+interest gives her back the lustre which our hatred deprived her
+of. The bad qualities become effaced, the good ones appear with a
+redoubled advantage; we even summon all our indulgence to justify
+the war she has made upon us. Now although all passions prove
+this truth, that of love exhibits it most clearly; for we may see
+a lover moved with rage by the neglect or the infidelity of her
+whom he loves, and meditating the utmost vengeance that his
+passion can inspire. Nevertheless as soon as the sight of his
+beloved has calmed the fury of his movements, his passion holds
+that beauty innocent; he only accuses himself, he condemns his
+condemnations, and by the miraculous power of selflove, he
+whitens the blackest actions of his mistress, and takes from her
+all crime to lay it on himself.</p>
+
+<p>{No date or number is given for this maxim}</p>
+
+<p><a name="XVIII">XVIII</a>.&mdash;There are none who press so heavily on others as
+the lazy ones, when they have satisfied their idleness, and wish
+to appear industrious. (1666, No. 91.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XIX">XIX</a>.&mdash;The blindness of men is the most dangerous effect
+of their pride; it seems to nourish and augment it, it deprives
+us of knowledge of remedies which can solace our miseries and can
+cure our faults. (1665, No. 102.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XX">XX</a>.&mdash;One has never less reason than when one despairs of
+finding it in others. (1665, No. 103.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXI">XXI</a>.&mdash;Philosophers, and Seneca above all, have not
+diminished crimes by their precepts; they have only used them in
+the building up of pride. (1665, No. 105.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXII">XXII</a>.&mdash;It is a proof of little friendship not to perceive
+the growing coolness of that of our friends. (1666, No. 97.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXIII">XXIII</a>.&mdash;The most wise may be so in indifferent and
+ordinary matters, but they are seldom so in their most serious
+affairs. (1665, No. 132.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXIV">XXIV</a>.&mdash;The most subtle folly grows out of the most subtle
+wisdom. (1665, No. 134.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXV">XXV</a>.&mdash;Sobriety is the love of health, or an incapacity to
+eat much. (l665, No. 135.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXVI">XXVI</a>.&mdash;We never forget things so well as when we are
+tired of talking of them. (1665, No. 144.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXVII">XXVII</a>.&mdash;The praise bestowed upon us is at least useful in
+rooting us in the practice of virtue. (1665, No. 155.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXVIII">XXVIII</a>.&mdash;Self-love takes care to prevent him whom we
+flatter from being him who most flatters us. (1665, No. 157.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXIX">XXIX</a>.&mdash;Men only blame vice and praise virtue from
+interest. (1665, No. 151.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXX">XXX</a>.&mdash;We make no difference in the kinds of anger,
+although there is that which is light and almost innocent, which
+arises from warmth of complexion, temperament, and another very
+criminal, which is, to speak properly, the fury of pride. (1665,
+No. 159.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXI">XXXI</a>.&mdash;Great souls are not those who have fewer passions
+and more virtues than the common, but those only who have greater
+designs. (1665, No. 161.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXII">XXXII</a>.&mdash;Kings do with men as with pieces of money; they
+make them bear what value they will, and one is forced to receive
+them according to their currency value, and not at their true
+worth. (1665, No. 165.)</p>
+
+<p>[See Burns{, <i>For A' That An A' That</i>}&mdash; "The rank is but
+the guinea's stamp, {The} man's {the gowd} for a' that." Also
+Farquhar and other parallel passages pointed out in <i>Familiar
+Words</i>.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXIII">XXXIII</a>.&mdash;Natural ferocity makes fewer people cruel than
+self-love. (1665, No. 174.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXIV">XXXIV</a>.&mdash;One may say of all our virtues as an Italian poet
+says of the propriety of women, that it is often merely the art
+of appearing chaste. (1665, No. 176.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXV">XXXV</a>.&mdash;There are crimes which become innocent and even
+glorious by their brilliancy,* their number, or their excess;
+thus it happens that public robbery is called financial skill,
+and the unjust capture of provinces is called a conquest. (1665,
+No. 192.)</p>
+
+<blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>*Some crimes may be excused by their brilliancy, such as those
+of Jael, of Deborah, of Brutus, and of Charlotte
+Corday&mdash;further than this the maxim is satire.</p>
+</blockquote></blockquote>
+<p><a name="XXXVI">XXXVI</a>.&mdash;One never finds in man good or evil in excess.
+(1665, No. 201.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXVII">XXXVII</a>.&mdash;Those who are incapable of committing great
+crimes do not easily suspect others. (1665, No. {2}08.)</p>
+
+<p>{The text incorrectly numbers this maxim as 508. It is
+208.}</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXVIII">XXXVIII</a>.&mdash;The pomp of funerals concerns rather the vanity
+of the living, than the honour of the dead. (1665, No. 213.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XXXIX">XXXIX</a>.&mdash;Whatever variety and change appears in the world,
+we may remark a secret chain, and a regulated order of all time
+by Providence, which makes everything follow in due rank and fall
+into its destined course. (1665, No. 225.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XL">XL</a>.&mdash;Intrepidity should sustain the heart in conspiracies
+in place of valour which alone furnishes all the firmness which
+is necessary for the perils of war. (1665, No. 231.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLI">XLI</a>.&mdash;Those who wish to define victory by her birth will
+be tempted to imitate the poets, and to call her the Daughter of
+Heaven, since they cannot find her origin on earth. Truly she is
+produced from an infinity of actions, which instead of wishing to
+beget her, only look to the particular interests of their
+masters, since all those who compose an army, in aiming at their
+own rise and glory, produce a good so great and general. (1665,
+No. 232.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLII">XLII</a>.&mdash;That man who has never been in danger cannot
+answer for his courage. (1665, No. 236.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLIII">XLIII</a>.&mdash;We more often place bounds on our gratitude than
+on our desires and our hopes. (1665, No. 241.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLIV">XLIV</a>.&mdash;Imitation is always unhappy, for all which is
+counterfeit displeases by the very things which charm us when
+they are original (<i>Naturelles</i>). (1665, No. 245.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLV">XLV</a>.&mdash;We do not regret the loss of our friends according
+to <i>their</i> merits, but according to OUR wants, and the opinion with
+which we believed we had impressed them of our worth. (1665, No.
+248.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLVI">XLVI</a>.&mdash;It is very hard to separate the general goodness
+spread all over the world from great cleverness. (1665, No.
+252.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLVII">XLVII</a>.&mdash;For us to be always good, others should believe
+that they cannot behave wickedly to us with impunity. (1665, No.
+254.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLVIII">XLVIII</a>.&mdash;A confidence in being able to please is often an
+infallible means of being displeasing. (1665, No. 256.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XLIX">XLIX</a>.&mdash;The confidence we have in ourselves arises in a
+great measure from that that we have in others. (1665, No.
+258.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="L">L</a>.&mdash;There is a general revolution which changes the
+tastes of the mind as well as the fortunes of the world. (1665,
+No. 250.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LI">LI</a>.&mdash;Truth is foundation and the reason of the perfection
+of beauty, for of whatever stature a thing may be, it cannot be
+beautiful and perfect unless it be truly that she should be, and
+possess truly all that she should have (1665, No. 260.)</p>
+
+<p>[Beauty is truth, truth beauty.{&mdash;John Keats, "Ode on a a
+Grecian Urn," (1820), Stanza 5}]</p>
+
+<p><a name="LII">LII</a>.&mdash;There are fine things which are more brilliant when
+unfinished than when finished too much. (1665, No. 262.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LIII">LIII</a>.&mdash;Magnanimity is a noble effort of pride which makes
+a man master of himself, to make him master of all things. (1665,
+No. 271.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LIV">LIV</a>.&mdash;Luxury and too refined a policy in states are a
+sure presage of their fall, because all parties looking after
+their own interest turn away from the public good. (1665, No.
+282.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LV">LV</a>.&mdash;Of all passions that which is least known to us is
+idleness; she is the most ardent and evil of all, although her
+violence may be insensible, and the evils she causes concealed;
+if we consider her power attentively we shall find that in all
+encounters she makes herself mistress of our sentiments, our
+interests, and our pleasures; like the (fabled) Remora, she can
+stop the greatest vessels, she is a hidden rock, more dangerous
+in the most important matters than sudden squalls and the most
+violent tempests. The repose of idleness is a magic charm which
+suddenly suspends the most ardent pursuits and the most obstinate
+resolutions. In fact to give a true notion of this passion we
+must add that idleness, like a beatitude of the soul, consoles us
+for all losses and fills the vacancy of all our wants. (1665, No.
+290.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LVI">LVI</a>.&mdash;We are very fond of reading others' characters, but
+we do not like to be read ourselves. (1665, No. 296.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LVII">LVII</a>.&mdash;What a tiresome malady is that which forces one to
+preserve your health by a severe regimen. (<i>Ibid,</i> No. 298.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LVIII">LVIII</a>.&mdash;It is much easier to take love when one is free,
+than to get rid of it after having taken it. (1665, No. 300.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LIX">LIX</a>.&mdash;Women for the most part surrender themselves more
+from weakness than from passion. Whence it is that bold and
+pushing men succeed better than others, although they are not so
+loveable. (1665, No. 301.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LX">LX</a>.&mdash;Not to love is in love, an infallible means of being
+beloved. (1665, No. 302.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXI">LXI</a>.&mdash;The sincerity which lovers and mistresses ask that
+both should know when they cease to love each other, arises much
+less from a wish to be warned of the cessation of love, than from
+a desire to be assured that they are beloved although no one
+denies it. (1665, No. 303.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXII">LXII</a>.&mdash;The most just comparison of love is that of a
+fever, and we have no power over either, as to its violence or
+its duration. (1665, No. 305.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXIII">LXIII</a>.&mdash;The greatest skill of the least skilful is to
+know how to submit to the direction of another. (1665, No.
+309.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXIV">LXIV</a>.&mdash;We always fear to see those whom we love when we
+have been flirting with others. (16{74}, No. 372.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXV">LXV</a>.&mdash;We ought to console ourselves for our faults when
+we have strength enough to own them. (16{74}, No. 375.)</p>
+
+<p>{The date of the previous two maxims is incorrectly cited as
+1665 in the text. I found this date immediately suspect because
+the translators' introduction states that the 1665 edition only
+had 316 maxims. In fact, the two maxims only appeared in the
+fourth of the first five editions (1674).}</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="sup2"></a>
+<br>
+
+
+<h2>SECOND SUPPLEMENT.</h2>
+
+<h3>REFLECTIONS, EXTRACTED FROM MS. LETTERS IN THE ROYAL
+LIBRARY.*</h3>
+
+<blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>*<i>A La Bibliotheque Du Roi</i>, it is difficult at present (June
+1871) to assign a name to the magnificent collection of books in
+Paris, the property of the nation.</p>
+</blockquote></blockquote>
+
+<p><a name="LXVI">LXVI</a>.&mdash;Interest is the soul of self-love, in as much as
+when the body deprived of its soul is without sight, feeling or
+knowledge, without thought or movement, so self-love, riven so to
+speak from its interest, neither sees, nor hears, nor smells, nor
+moves; thus it is that the same man who will run over land and
+sea for his own interest becomes suddenly paralyzed when engaged
+for that of others; from this arises that sudden dulness and, as
+it were, death, with which we afflict those to whom we speak of
+our own matters; from this also their sudden resurrection when in
+our narrative we relate something concerning them; from this we
+find in our conversations and business that a man becomes dull or
+bright just as his own interest is near to him or distant from
+him. (<i>Letter To Madame De Sabl&eacute;, Ms., Fol</i>. 211.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXVII">LXVII</a>.&mdash;Why we cry out so much against maxims which lay
+bare the heart of man, is because we fear that our own heart
+shall be laid bare. (<i>Maxim</i> 103, MS., fol. 310.*)</p>
+<blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>*The reader will recognise in these extracts portions of the
+Maxims previously given, sometimes the author has carefully
+polished them; at other times the words are identical. Our
+numbers will indicate where they are to be found in the foregoing
+collection.</p>
+</blockquote></blockquote>
+<p>LXVIII.&mdash;Hope and fear are inseparable. (<i>To Madame De
+Sabl&eacute;, Ms., Fol.</i> 222, MAX. 168.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXIX">LXIX</a>.&mdash;It is a common thing to hazard life to escape
+dishonour; but, when this is done, the actor takes very little
+pain to make the enterprise succeed in which he is engaged, and
+certain it is that they who hazard their lives to take a city or
+to conquer a province are better officers, have more merit, and
+wider and more useful, views than they who merely expose
+themselves to vindicate their honour; it is very common to find
+people of the latter class, very rare to find those of the
+former. (<i>Letter To M. Esprit, Ms., Fol</i>. 173, MAX. 219.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXX">LXX</a>.&mdash;The taste changes, but the will remains the same.
+(<i>To Madame De Sabl&eacute;, Fol.</i> 223, <i>Max.</i> 252.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXI">LXXI</a>.&mdash;The power which women whom we love have over us is
+greater than that which we have over ourselves. (<i>To The Same,
+Ms., Fol. 211, Max.</i> 259)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXII">LXXII</a>.&mdash;That which makes us believe so easily that others
+have defects is that we all so easily believe what we wish. (<i>To
+The Same, Ms., Fol. 223, Max.</i> 397.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXIII">LXXIII</a>.&mdash;I am perfectly aware that good sense and fine
+wit are tedious to every age, but tastes are not always the same,
+and what is good at one time will not seem so at another. This
+makes me think that few persons know how to be old. (<i>To The Same,
+Fol. 202, Max. 423.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXIV">LXXIV</a>.&mdash;God has permitted, to punish man for his original
+sin, that he should be so fond of his self-love, that he should
+be tormented by it in all the actions of his life. (<i>Ms., Fol.
+310, Max. 494.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXV">LXXV</a>.&mdash;And so far it seems to me the philosophy of a
+lacquey can go; I believe that all gaity in that state of life is
+very doubtful indeed. (<i>To Madame De Sabl&eacute;, Fol. 161, Max.
+504.</i>)</p>
+
+<p>[In the maxim cited the author relates how a footman about to
+be broken on the wheel danced on the scaffold. He seems to think
+that in his day the life of such servants was so miserable that
+their merriment was very doubtful.]</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="sup3"></a>
+<br>
+
+
+<h2>THIRD SUPPLEMENT</h2>
+
+<p>[The fifty following Maxims are taken from the Sixth Edition
+of the <i>Pens&eacute;es De La Rochefoucauld,</i> published by Claude
+Barbin, in 1693, more than twelve years after the death of the
+author (17th May, 1680). The reader will find some repetitions,
+but also some very valuable maxims.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXVI">LXXVI</a>.&mdash;Many persons wish to be devout; but no one wishes
+to be humble.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXVII">LXXVII</a>.&mdash;The labour of the body frees us from the pains
+of the mind, and thus makes the poor happy.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXVIII">LXXVIII</a>.&mdash;True penitential sorrows (mortifications) are
+those which are not known, vanity renders the others easy
+enough.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXIX">LXXIX</a>.&mdash;Humility is the altar upon which God wishes that
+we should offer him his sacrifices.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXX">LXXX</a>.&mdash;Few things are needed to make a wise man happy;
+nothing can make a fool content; that is why most men are
+miserable.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXI">LXXXI</a>.&mdash;We trouble ourselves less to become happy, than
+to make others believe we are so.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXII">LXXXII</a>.&mdash;It is more easy to extinguish the first desire
+than to satisfy those which follow.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXIII">LXXXIII</a>.&mdash;Wisdom is to the soul what health is to the
+body.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXIV">LXXXIV</a>.&mdash;The great ones of the earth can neither command
+health of body nor repose of mind, and they buy always at too
+dear a price the good they can acquire.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXV">LXXXV</a>.&mdash;Before strongly desiring anything we should
+examine what happiness he has who possesses it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXVI">LXXXVI</a>.&mdash;A true friend is the greatest of all goods, and
+that of which we think least of acquiring.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXVII">LXXXVII</a>.&mdash;Lovers do not wish to see the faults of their
+mistresses until their enchantment is at an end.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXVIII">LXXXVIII</a>.&mdash;Prudence and love are not made for each other;
+in the ratio that love increases, prudence diminishes.</p>
+
+<p><a name="LXXXIX">LXXXIX</a>.&mdash;It is sometimes pleasing to a husband to have a
+jealous wife; he hears her always speaking of the beloved
+object.</p>
+
+<p><a name="XC">XC</a>.&mdash;How much is a woman to be pitied who is at the same
+time possessed of virtue and love!</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCI">XCI</a>.&mdash;The wise man finds it better not to enter the
+encounter than to conquer.</p>
+
+<p>[Somewhat similar to Goldsmith's sage&mdash; "Who quits {a}
+world where strong temptations try, And since 'tis hard to
+co{mbat}, learns to fly."]</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCII">XCII</a>.&mdash;It is more necessary to study men than books.</p>
+
+<p>["The proper study of mankind is man."&mdash;Pope {<i>Essay On
+Man, (1733), Epistle II,</i> line 2}.]</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCIII">XCIII</a>.&mdash;Good and evil ordinarily come to those who have
+most of one or the other.</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCIV">XCIV</a>.&mdash;The accent and character of one's native country
+dwells in the mind and heart as on the tongue. (<i>Repitition Of
+Maxim</i> 342.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCV">XCV</a>.&mdash;The greater part of men have qualities which, like
+those of plants, are discovered by chance. (<i>Repitition Of Maxim</i>
+344.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCVI">XCVI</a>.&mdash;A good woman is a hidden treasure; he who
+discovers her will do well not to boast about it. (<i>See Maxim</i>
+368.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCVII">XCVII</a>.&mdash;Most women do not weep for the loss of a lover to
+show that they have been loved so much as to show that they are
+worth being loved. (<i>See Maxim</i> 362.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCVIII">XCVIII</a>.&mdash;There are many virtuous women who are weary of
+the part they have played. (<i>See Maxim</i> 367.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="XCIX">XCIX</a>.&mdash;If we think we love for love's sake we are much
+mistaken. (<i>See Maxim</i> 374.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="C">C</a>.&mdash;The restraint we lay upon ourselves to be constant,
+is not much better than an inconstancy. (<i>See Maxim</i> 369,
+381.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CI">CI</a>.&mdash;There are those who avoid our jealousy, of whom we
+ought to be jealous. (<i>See Maxim</i> 359.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CII">CII</a>.&mdash;Jealousy is always born with love, but does not
+always die with it. (<i>See Maxim</i> 361.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CIII">CIII</a>.&mdash;When we love too much it is difficult to discover
+when we have ceased to be beloved.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CIV">CIV</a>.&mdash;We know very well that we should not talk about our
+wives, but we do not remember that it is not so well to speak of
+ourselves. (<i>See Maxim</i> 364.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CV">CV</a>.&mdash;Chance makes us known to others and to ourselves.
+(<i>See Maxim</i> 345.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CVI">CVI</a>.&mdash;We find very few people of good sense, except those
+who are of our own opinion. (<i>See Maxim</i> 347.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CVII">CVII</a>.&mdash;We commonly praise the good hearts of those who
+admire us. (<i>See Maxim</i> 356.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CVIII">CVIII</a>.&mdash;Man only blames himself in order that he may be
+praised.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CIX">CIX</a>.&mdash;Little minds are wounded by the smallest things.
+(<i>See Maxim</i> 357.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CX">CX</a>.&mdash;There are certain faults which placed in a good
+light please more than perfection itself. (<i>See Maxim</i> 354.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXI">CXI</a>.&mdash;That which makes us so bitter against those who do
+us a shrewd turn, is because they think themselves more clever
+than we are. (<i>See Maxim</i> 350.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXII">CXII</a>.&mdash;We are always bored by those whom we bore.
+(<i>See Maxim</i> 352.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXIII">CXIII</a>.&mdash;The harm that others do us is often less than
+that we do ourselves. (<i>See Maxim</i> 363.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXIV">CXIV</a>.&mdash;It is never more difficult to speak well than when
+we are ashamed of being silent.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXV">CXV</a>.&mdash;Those faults are always pardonable that we have the
+courage to avow.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXVI">CXVI</a>.&mdash;The greatest fault of penetration is not that it
+goes to the bottom of a matter&mdash;but beyond it. (<i>See Maxim</i>
+377.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXVII">CXVII</a>.&mdash;We give advice, but we cannot give the wisdom to
+profit by it. (<i>See Maxim</i> 378.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXVIII">CXVIII</a>.&mdash;When our merit declines, our taste declines
+also. (<i>See Maxim</i> 379.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXIX">CXIX</a>.&mdash;Fortune discovers our vices and our virtues, as
+the light makes objects plain to the sight. (<i>See Maxim</i> 380.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXX">CXX</a>.&mdash;Our actions are like rhymed verse-ends
+(<i>Bouts-Rim&eacute;s</i>) which everyone turns as he pleases. (<i>See
+Maxim</i> 382.)</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXXI">CXXI</a>.&mdash;There is nothing more natural, nor more deceptive,
+than to believe that we are beloved.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXXII">CXXII</a>.&mdash;We would rather see those to whom we have done a
+benefit, than those who have done us one.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXXIII">CXXIII</a>.&mdash;It is more difficult to hide the opinions we
+have than to feign those which we have not.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXXIV">CXXIV</a>.&mdash;Renewed friendships require more care than those
+that have never been broken.</p>
+
+<p><a name="CXXV">CXXV</a>.&mdash;A man to whom no one is pleasing is much more
+unhappy than one who pleases nobody.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="reflect"></a>
+<br>
+
+
+<h2>REFLECTIONS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS, BY THE DUKE DE LA
+ROCHEFOUCAULD</h2>
+<a name="R.I"></a>
+<h3>I. On Confidence.</h3>
+
+<p>Though sincerity and confidence have many points of
+resemblance, they have yet many points of difference.</p>
+
+<p>Sincerity is an openness of heart, which shows us what we are,
+a love of truth, a dislike to deception, a wish to compensate our
+faults and to lessen them by the merit of confessing them.</p>
+
+<p>Confidence leaves us less liberty, its rules are stricter, it
+requires more prudence and reticence, and we are not always free
+to give it. It relates not only to ourselves, since our interests
+are often mixed up with those of others; it requires great
+delicacy not to expose our friends in exposing ourselves, not to
+draw upon their goodness to enhance the value of what we
+give.</p>
+
+<p>Confidence always pleases those who receive it. It is a
+tribute we pay to their merit, a deposit we commit to their
+trust, a pledge which gives them a claim upon us, a kind of
+dependence to which we voluntarily submit. I do not wish from
+what I have said to depreciate confidence, so necessary to man.
+It is in society the link between acquaintance and friendship. I
+only wish to state its limits to make it true and real. I would
+that it was always sincere, always discreet, and that it had
+neither weakness nor interest. I know it is hard to place proper
+limits on being taken into all our friends' confidence, and
+taking them into all ours.</p>
+
+<p>Most frequently we make confidants from vanity, a love of
+talking, a wish to win the confidence of others, and make an
+exchange of secrets.</p>
+
+<p>Some may have a motive for confiding in us, towards whom we
+have no motive for confiding. With them we discharge the
+obligation in keeping their secrets and trusting them with small
+confidences.</p>
+
+<p>Others whose fidelity we know trust nothing to us, but we
+confide in them by choice and inclination.</p>
+
+<p>We should hide from them nothing that concerns us, we should
+always show them with equal truth, our virtues and our vices,
+without exaggerating the one or diminishing the other. We should
+make it a rule never to have half confidences. They always
+embarrass those who give them, and dissatisfy those who receive
+them. They shed an uncertain light on what we want hidden,
+increase curiosity, entitling the recipients to know more, giving
+them leave to consider themselves free to talk of what they have
+guessed. It is far safer and more honest to tell nothing than to
+be silent when we have begun to tell. There are other rules to be
+observed in matters confided to us, all are important, to all
+prudence and trust are essential.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone agrees that a secret should be kept intact, but
+everyone does not agree as to the nature and importance of
+secresy. Too often we consult ourselves as to what we should say,
+what we should leave unsaid. There are few permanent secrets, and
+the scruple against revealing them will not last for ever.</p>
+
+<p>With those friends whose truth we know we have the closest
+intimacy. They have always spoken unreservedly to us, we should
+always do the same to them. They know our habits and connexions,
+and see too clearly not to perceive the slightest change. They
+may have elsewhere learnt what we have promised not to tell. It
+is not in our power to tell them what has been entrusted to us,
+though it might tend to their interest to know it. We feel as
+confident of them as of ourselves, and we are reduced to the hard
+fate of losing their friendship, which is dear to us, or of being
+faithless as regards a secret. This is doubtless the hardest test
+of fidelity, but it should not move an honest man; it is then
+that he can sacrifice himself to others. His first duty is to
+rigidly keep his trust in its entirety. He should not only
+control and guard his and his voice, but even his lighter talk,
+so that nothing be seen in his conversation or manner that could
+direct the curiosity of others towards that which he wishes to
+conceal.</p>
+
+<p>We have often need of strength and prudence wherewith to
+oppose the exigencies of most of our friends who make a claim on
+our confidence, and seek to know all about us. We should never
+allow them to acquire this unexceptionable right. There are
+accidents and circumstances which do not fall in their
+cognizance; if they complain, we should endure their complaints
+and excuse ourselves with gentleness, but if they are still
+unreasonable, we should sacrifice their friendship to our duty,
+and choose between two inevitable evils, the one reparable, the
+other irreparable.</p>
+
+<a name="R.II"></a>
+<h3>II. On Difference of Character.</h3>
+
+<p>Although all the qualities of mind may be united in a great
+genius, yet there are some which are special and peculiar to him;
+his views are unlimited; he always acts uniformly and with the
+same activity; he sees distant objects as if present; he
+comprehends and grasps the greatest, sees and notices the
+smallest matters; his thoughts are elevated, broad, just and
+intelligible. Nothing escapes his observation, and he often finds
+truth in spite of the obscurity that hides her from others.</p>
+
+<p>A lofty mind always thinks nobly, it easily creates vivid,
+agreeable, and natural fancies, places them in their best light,
+clothes them with all appropriate adornments, studies others'
+tastes, and clears away from its own thoughts all that is useless
+and disagreeable.</p>
+
+<p>A clever, pliant, winning mind knows how to avoid and overcome
+difficulties. Bending easily to what it wants, it understands the
+inclination and temper it is dealing with, and by managing their
+interests it advances and establishes its own.</p>
+
+<p>A well regulated mind sees all things as they should be seen,
+appraises them at their proper value, turns them to its own
+advantage, and adheres firmly to its own opinions as it knows all
+their force and weight.</p>
+
+<p>A difference exists between a working mind and a business-like
+mind. We can undertake business without turning it to our own
+interest. Some are clever only in what does not concern them, and
+the reverse in all that does. There are others again whose
+cleverness is limited to their own business, and who know how to
+turn everything to their own advantage.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible to have a serious turn of mind, and yet to talk
+pleasantly and cheerfully. This class of mind is suited to all
+persons in all times of life. Young persons have usually a
+cheerful and satirical turn, untempered by seriousness, thus
+often making themselves disagreeable.</p>
+
+<p>No part is easier to play than that of being always pleasant;
+and the applause we sometimes receive in censuring others is not
+worth being exposed to the chance of offending them when they are
+out of temper.</p>
+
+<p>Satire is at once the most agreeable and most dangerous of
+mental qualities. It always pleases when it is refined, but we
+always fear those who use it too much, yet satire should be
+allowed when unmixed with spite, and when the person satirised
+can join in the satire.</p>
+
+<p>It is unfortunate to have a satirical turn without affecting
+to be pleased or without loving to jest. It requires much
+adroitness to continue satirical without falling into one of
+these extremes.</p>
+
+<p>Raillery is a kind of mirth which takes possession of the
+imagination, and shows every object in an absurd light; wit
+combines more or less softness or harshness.</p>
+
+<p>There is a kind of refined and flattering raillery that only
+hits the faults that persons admit, which understands how to hide
+the praise it gives under the appearance of blame, and shows the
+good while feigning a wish to hide it.</p>
+
+<p>An acute mind and a cunning mind are very dissimilar. The
+first always pleases; it is unfettered, it perceives the most
+delicate and sees the most imperceptible matters. A cunning
+spirit never goes straight, it endeavours to secure its object by
+byeways and short cuts. This conduct is soon found out, it always
+gives rise to distrust and never reaches greatness.</p>
+
+<p>There is a difference between an ardent and a brilliant mind,
+a fiery spirit travels further and faster, while a brilliant mind
+is sparkling, attractive, accurate.</p>
+
+<p>Gentleness of mind is an easy and accommodating manner which
+always pleases when not insipid.</p>
+
+<p>A mind full of details devotes itself to the management and
+regulation of the smallest particulars it meets with. This
+distinction is usually limited to little matters, yet it is not
+absolutely incompatible with greatness, and when these two
+qualities are united in the same mind they raise it infinitely
+above others.</p>
+
+<p>The expression "<i>Bel Esprit</i>" is much perverted, for all that
+one can say of the different kinds of mind meet together in the
+"<i>Bel Esprit</i>." Yet as the epithet is bestowed on an infinite
+number of bad poets and tedious authors, it is more often used to
+ridicule than to praise.</p>
+
+<p>There are yet many other epithets for the mind which mean the
+same thing, the difference lies in the tone and manner of saying
+them, but as tones and manner cannot appear in writing I shall
+not go into distinctions I cannot explain. Custom explains this
+in saying that a man has wit, has much wit, that he is a great
+wit; there are tones and manners which make all the difference
+between phrases which seem all alike on paper, and yet express a
+different order of mind.</p>
+
+<p>So we say that a man has only one kind of wit, that he has
+several, that he has every variety of wit.</p>
+
+<p>One can be a fool with much wit, and one need not be a fool
+even with very little wit.</p>
+
+<p>To have much mind is a doubtful expression. It may mean every
+class of mind that can be mentioned, it may mean none in
+particular. It may mean that he talks sensibly while he acts
+foolishly. We may have a mind, but a narrow one. A mind may be
+fitted for some things, not for others. We may have a large
+measure of mind fitted for nothing, and one is often
+inconvenienced with much mind; still of this kind of mind we may
+say that it is sometimes pleasing in society.</p>
+
+<p>Though the gifts of the mind are infinite, they can, it seems
+to me, be thus classified.</p>
+
+<p>There are some so beautiful that everyone can see and feel
+their beauty.</p>
+
+<p>There are some lovely, it is true, but which are
+wearisome.</p>
+
+<p>There are some which are lovely, which all the world admire,
+but without knowing why.</p>
+
+<p>There are some so refined and delicate that few are capable
+even of remarking all their beauties.</p>
+
+<p>There are others which, though imperfect, yet are produced
+with such skill, and sustained and managed with such sense and
+grace, that they even deserve to be admired.</p>
+
+<a name="R.III"></a>
+<h3>III. On Taste.</h3>
+
+<p>Some persons have more wit than taste, others have more taste
+than wit. There is greater vanity and caprice in taste than in
+wit.</p>
+
+<p>The word taste has different meanings, which it is easy to
+mistake. There is a difference between the taste which in certain
+objects has an attraction for us, and the taste that makes us
+understand and distinguish the qualities we judge by.</p>
+
+<p>We may like a comedy without having a sufficiently fine and
+delicate taste to criticise it accurately. Some tastes lead us
+imperceptibly to objects, from which others carry us away by
+their force or intensity.</p>
+
+<p>Some persons have bad taste in everything, others have bad
+taste only in some things, but a correct and good taste in
+matters within their capacity. Some have peculiar taste, which
+they know to be bad, but which they still follow. Some have a
+doubtful taste, and let chance decide, their indecision makes
+them change, and they are affected with pleasure or weariness on
+their friends' judgment. Others are always prejudiced, they are
+the slaves of their tastes, which they adhere to in everything.
+Some know what is good, and are horrified at what is not; their
+opinions are clear and true, and they find the reason for their
+taste in their mind and understanding.</p>
+
+<p>Some have a species of instinct (the source of which they are
+ignorant of), and decide all questions that come before them by
+its aid, and always decide rightly.</p>
+
+<p>These follow their taste more than their intelligence, because
+they do not permit their temper and self-love to prevail over
+their natural discernment. All they do is in harmony, all is in
+the same spirit. This harmony makes them decide correctly on
+matters, and form a correct estimate of their value. But speaking
+generally there are few who have a taste fixed and independent of
+that of their friends, they follow example and fashion which
+generally form the standard of taste.</p>
+
+<p>In all the diversities of taste that we discern, it is very
+rare and almost impossible to meet with that sort of good taste
+that knows how to set a price on the particular, and yet
+understands the right value that should be placed on all. Our
+knowledge is too limited, and that correct discernment of good
+qualities which goes to form a correct judgment is too seldom to
+be met with except in regard to matters that do not concern
+us.</p>
+
+<p>As regards ourselves our taste has not this all-important
+discernment. Preoccupation, trouble, all that concern us, present
+it to us in another aspect. We do not see with the same eyes what
+does and what does not relate to us. Our taste is guided by the
+bent of our self-love and temper, which supplies us with new
+views which we adapt to an infinite number of changes and
+uncertainties. Our taste is no longer our own, we cease to
+control it, without our consent it changes, and the same objects
+appear to us in such divers aspects that ultimately we fail to
+perceive what we have seen and heard.</p>
+
+<a name="R.IV"></a>
+<h3>IV. On Society.</h3>
+
+<p>In speaking of society my plan is not to speak of friendship,
+for, though they have some connection, they are yet very
+different. The former has more in it of greatness and humility,
+and the greatest merit of the latter is to resemble the
+former.</p>
+
+<p>For the present I shall speak of that particular kind of
+intercourse that gentlemen should have with each other. It would
+be idle to show how far society is essential to men: all seek for
+it, and all find it, but few adopt the method of making it
+pleasant and lasting.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone seeks to find his pleasure and his advantage at the
+expense of others. We prefer ourselves always to those with whom
+we intend to live, and they almost always perceive the
+preference. It is this which disturbs and destroys society. We
+should discover a means to hide this love of selection since it
+is too ingrained in us to be in our power to destroy. We should
+make our pleasure that of other persons, to humour, never to
+wound their self-love.</p>
+
+<p>The mind has a great part to do in so great a work, but it is
+not merely sufficient for us to guide it in the different courses
+it should hold.</p>
+
+<p>The agreement we meet between minds would not keep society
+together for long if she was not governed and sustained by good
+sense, temper, and by the consideration which ought to exist
+between persons who have to live together.</p>
+
+<p>It sometimes happens that persons opposite in temper and mind
+become united. They doubtless hold together for different
+reasons, which cannot last for long. Society may subsist between
+those who are our inferiors by birth or by personal qualities,
+but those who have these advantages should not abuse them. They
+should seldom let it be perceived that they serve to instruct
+others. They should let their conduct show that they, too, have
+need to be guided and led by reason, and accommodate themselves
+as far as possible to the feeling and the interests of the
+others.</p>
+
+<p>To make society pleasant, it is essential that each should
+retain his freedom of action. A man should not see himself, or he
+should see himself without dependence, and at the same time amuse
+himself. He should have the power of separating himself without
+that separation bringing any change on the society. He should
+have the power to pass by one and the other, if he does not wish
+to expose himself to occasional embarrassments; and he should
+remember that he is often bored when he believes he has not the
+power even to bore. He should share in what he believes to be the
+amusement of persons with whom he wishes to live, but he should
+not always be liable to the trouble of providing them.</p>
+
+<p>Complaisance is essential in society, but it should have its
+limits, it becomes a slavery when it is extreme. We should so
+render a free consent, that in following the opinion of our
+friends they should believe that they follow ours.</p>
+
+<p>We should readily excuse our friends when their faults are
+born with them, and they are less than their good qualities. We
+should often avoid to show what they have said, and what they
+have left unsaid. We should try to make them perceive their
+faults, so as to give them the merit of correcting them.</p>
+
+<p>There is a kind of politeness which is necessary in the
+intercourse among gentlemen, it makes them comprehend badinage,
+and it keeps them from using and employing certain figures of
+speech, too rude and unrefined, which are often used
+thoughtlessly when we hold to our opinion with too much
+warmth.</p>
+
+<p>The intercourse of gentlemen cannot subsist without a certain
+kind of confidence; this should be equal on both sides. Each
+should have an appearance of sincerity and of discretion which
+never causes the fear of anything imprudent being said.</p>
+
+<p>There should be some variety in wit. Those who have only one
+kind of wit cannot please for long unless they can take different
+roads, and not both use the same talents, thus adding to the
+pleasure of society, and keeping the same harmony that different
+voices and different instruments should observe in music; and as
+it is detrimental to the quiet of society, that many persons
+should have the same interests, it is yet as necessary for it
+that their interests should not be different.</p>
+
+<p>We should anticipate what can please our friends, find out how
+to be useful to them so as to exempt them from annoyance, and
+when we cannot avert evils, seem to participate in them,
+insensibly obliterate without attempting to destroy them at a
+blow, and place agreeable objects in their place, or at least
+such as will interest them. We should talk of subjects that
+concern them, but only so far as they like, and we should take
+great care where we draw the line. There is a species of
+politeness, and we may say a similar species of humanity, which
+does not enter too quickly into the recesses of the heart. It
+often takes pains to allow us to see all that our friends know,
+while they have still the advantage of not knowing to the full
+when we have penetrated the depth of the heart.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the intercourse between gentlemen at once gives them
+familiarity and furnishes them with an infinite number of
+subjects on which to talk freely.</p>
+
+<p>Few persons have sufficient tact and good sense fairly to
+appreciate many matters that are essential to maintain society.
+We desire to turn away at a certain point, but we do not want to
+be mixed up in everything, and we fear to know all kinds of
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>As we should stand at a certain distance to view objects, so
+we should also stand at a distance to observe society; each has
+its proper point of view from which it should be regarded. It is
+quite right that it should not be looked at too closely, for
+there is hardly a man who in all matters allows himself to be
+seen as he really is.</p>
+
+<a name="R.V"></a>
+<h3>V. On Conversation.</h3>
+
+<p>The reason why so few persons are agreeable in conversation is
+that each thinks more of what he desires to say, than of what the
+others say, and that we make bad listeners when we want to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it is necessary to listen to those who talk, we should
+give them the time they want, and let them say even senseless
+things; never contradict or interrupt them; on the contrary, we
+should enter into their mind and taste, illustrate their meaning,
+praise anything they say that deserves praise, and let them see
+we praise more from our choice than from agreement with them.</p>
+
+<p>To please others we should talk on subjects they like and that
+interest them, avoid disputes upon indifferent matters, seldom
+ask questions, and never let them see that we pretend to be
+better informed than they are.</p>
+
+<p>We should talk in a more or less serious manner, and upon more
+or less abstruse subjects, according to the temper and
+understanding of the persons we talk with, and readily give them
+the advantage of deciding without obliging them to answer when
+they are not anxious to talk.</p>
+
+<p>After having in this way fulfilled the duties of politeness,
+we can speak our opinions to our listeners when we find an
+opportunity without a sign of presumption or opinionatedness.
+Above all things we should avoid often talking of ourselves and
+giving ourselves as an example; nothing is more tiresome than a
+man who quotes himself for everything.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot give too great study to find out the manner and the
+capacity of those with whom we talk, so as to join in the
+conversation of those who have more than ourselves without
+hurting by this preference the wishes or interests of others.</p>
+
+<p>Then we should modestly use all the modes abovementioned to
+show our thoughts to them, and make them, if possible, believe
+that we take our ideas from them.</p>
+
+<p>We should never say anything with an air of authority, nor
+show any superiority of mind. We should avoid far-fetched
+expressions, expressions hard or forced, and never let the words
+be grander than the matter.</p>
+
+<p>It is not wrong to retain our opinions if they are reasonable,
+but we should yield to reason, wherever she appears and from
+whatever side she comes, she alone should govern our opinions, we
+should follow her without opposing the opinions of others, and
+without seeming to ignore what they say.</p>
+
+<p>It is dangerous to seek to be always the leader of the
+conversation, and to push a good argument too hard, when we have
+found one. Civility often hides half its understanding, and when
+it meets with an opinionated man who defends the bad side, spares
+him the disgrace of giving way.</p>
+
+<p>We are sure to displease when we speak too long and too often
+of one subject, and when we try to turn the conversation upon
+subjects that we think more instructive than others, we should
+enter indifferently upon every subject that is agreeable to
+others, stopping where they wish, and avoiding all they do not
+agree with.</p>
+
+<p>Every kind of conversation, however witty it may be, is not
+equally fitted for all clever persons; we should select what is
+to their taste and suitable to their condition, their sex, their
+talents, and also choose the time to say it.</p>
+
+<p>We should observe the place, the occasion, the temper in which
+we find the person who listens to us, for if there is much art in
+speaking to the purpose, there is no less in knowing when to be
+silent. There is an eloquent silence which serves to approve or
+to condemn, there is a silence of discretion and of respect. In a
+word, there is a tone, an air, a manner, which renders everything
+in conversation agreeable or disagreeable, refined or vulgar.</p>
+
+<p>But it is given to few persons to keep this secret well. Those
+who lay down rules too often break them, and the safest we are
+able to give is to listen much, to speak little, and to say
+nothing that will ever give ground for regret.</p>
+
+<a name="R.VI"></a>
+<h3>VI. Falsehood.</h3>
+
+<p>We are false in different ways. There are some men who are
+false from wishing always to appear what they are not. There are
+some who have better faith, who are born false, who deceive
+themselves, and who never see themselves as they really are; to
+some is given a true understanding and a false taste, others have
+a false understanding and some correctness in taste; there are
+some who have not any falsity either in taste or mind. These last
+are very rare, for to speak generally, there is no one who has
+not some falseness in some corner of his mind or his taste.</p>
+
+<p>What makes this falseness so universal, is that as our
+qualities are uncertain and confused, so too, are our tastes; we
+do not see things exactly as they are, we value them more or less
+than they are worth, and do not bring them into unison with
+ourselves in a manner which suits them or suits our condition or
+qualities.</p>
+
+<p>This mistake gives rise to an infinite number of falsities in
+the taste and in the mind. Our self-love is flattered by all that
+presents itself to us under the guise of good.</p>
+
+<p>But as there are many kinds of good which affect our vanity
+and our temper, so they are often followed from custom or
+advantage. We follow because the others follow, without
+considering that the same feeling ought not to be equally
+embarrassing to all kinds of persons, and that it should attach
+itself more or less firmly, according as persons agree more or
+less with those who follow them.</p>
+
+<p>We dread still more to show falseness in taste than in mind.
+Gentleness should approve without prejudice what deserves to be
+approved, follow what deserves to be followed, and take offence
+at nothing. But there should be great distinction and great
+accuracy. We should distinguish between what is good in the
+abstract and what is good for ourselves, and always follow in
+reason the natural inclination which carries us towards matters
+that please us.</p>
+
+<p>If men only wished to excel by the help of their own talents,
+and in following their duty, there would be nothing false in
+their taste or in their conduct. They would show what they were,
+they would judge matters by their lights, and they would attract
+by their reason. There would be a discernment in their views, in
+their sentiments, their taste would be true, it would come to
+them direct, and not from others, they would follow from choice
+and not from habit or chance. If we are false in admiring what
+should not be admired, it is oftener from envy that we affix a
+value to qualities which are good in themselves, but which do not
+become us. A magistrate is false when he flatters himself he is
+brave, and that he will be able to be bold in certain cases. He
+should be as firm and stedfast in a plot which ought to be
+stifled without fear of being false, as he would be false and
+absurd in fighting a duel about it.</p>
+
+<p>A woman may like science, but all sciences are not suitable
+for her, and the doctrines of certain sciences never become her,
+and when applied by her are always false.</p>
+
+<p>We should allow reason and good sense to fix the value of
+things, they should determine our taste and give things the merit
+they deserve, and the importance it is fitting we should give
+them. But nearly all men are deceived in the price and in the
+value, and in these mistakes there is always a kind of
+falseness.</p>
+
+<a name="R.VII"></a>
+<h3>VII. On Air and Manner.</h3>
+
+<p>There is an air which belongs to the figure and talents of
+each individual; we always lose it when we abandon it to assume
+another.</p>
+
+<p>We should try to find out what air is natural to us and never
+abandon it, but make it as perfect as we can. This is the reason
+that the majority of children please. It is because they are
+wrapt up in the air and manner nature has given them, and are
+ignorant of any other. They are changed and corrupted when they
+quit infancy, they think they should imitate what they see, and
+they are not altogether able to imitate it. In this imitation
+there is always something of falsity and uncertainty. They have
+nothing settled in their manner and opinions. Instead of being in
+reality what they want to appear, they seek to appear what they
+are not.</p>
+
+<p>All men want to be different, and to be greater than they are;
+they seek for an air other than their own, and a mind different
+from what they possess; they take their style and manner at
+chance. They make experiments upon themselves without considering
+that what suits one person will not suit everyone, that there is
+no universal rule for taste or manners, and that there are no
+good copies.</p>
+
+<p>Few men, nevertheless, can have unison in many matters without
+being a copy of each other, if each follow his natural turn of
+mind. But in general a person will not wholly follow it. He loves
+to imitate. We often imitate the same person without perceiving
+it, and we neglect our own good qualities for the good qualities
+of others, which generally do not suit us.</p>
+
+<p>I do not pretend, from what I say, that each should so wrap
+himself up in himself as not to be able to follow example, or to
+add to his own, useful and serviceable habits, which nature has
+not given him. Arts and sciences may be proper for the greater
+part of those who are capable for them. Good manners and
+politeness are proper for all the world. But, yet acquired
+qualities should always have a certain agreement and a certain
+union with our own natural qualities, which they imperceptibly
+extend and increase. We are elevated to a rank and dignity above
+ourselves. We are often engaged in a new profession for which
+nature has not adapted us. All these conditions have each an air
+which belong to them, but which does not always agree with our
+natural manner. This change of our fortune often changes our air
+and our manners, and augments the air of dignity, which is always
+false when it is too marked, and when it is not united and
+amalgamated with that which nature has given us. We should unite
+and blend them together, and thus render them such that they can
+never be separated.</p>
+
+<p>We should not speak of all subjects in one tone and in the
+same manner. We do not march at the head of a regiment as we walk
+on a promenade; and we should use the same style in which we
+should naturally speak of different things in the same way, with
+the same difference as we should walk, but always naturally, and
+as is suitable, either at the head of a regiment or on a
+promenade. There are some who are not content to abandon the air
+and manner natural to them to assume those of the rank and
+dignities to which they have arrived. There are some who assume
+prematurely the air of the dignities and rank to which they
+aspire. How many lieutenantgenerals assume to be marshals of
+France, how many barristers vainly repeat the style of the
+Chancellor and how many female citizens give themselves the airs
+of duchesses.</p>
+
+<p>But what we are most often vexed at is that no one knows how
+to conform his air and manners with his appearance, nor his style
+and words with his thoughts and sentiments, that every one
+forgets himself and how far he is insensibly removed from the
+truth. Nearly every one falls into this fault in some way. No one
+has an ear sufficiently fine to mark perfectly this kind of
+cadence.</p>
+
+<p>Thousands of people with good qualities are displeasing;
+thousands pleasing with far less abilities, and why? Because the
+first wish to appear to be what they are not, the second are what
+they appear.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the advantages or disadvantages that we have received
+from nature please in proportion as we know the air, the style,
+the manner, the sentiments that coincide with our condition and
+our appearance, and displease in the proportion they are removed
+from that point.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="index"></a>
+<br>
+
+
+<h1>INDEX</h1>
+
+<h6>THE LETTER R PRECEDING A REFERENCE REFERS TO THE REFLECTIONS,
+THE ROMAN NUMERALS REFER TO THE SUPPLEMENTS.</h6>
+
+<p>Ability, <a href="#162">162</a>, <a href="#165">165</a>, <a href="#199">199</a>, <a href="#245">245</a>,
+<a href="#283">283</a>, <a href="#288">288</a>. SEE Cleverness<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Sovereign, <a href="#244">244</a>.<br>
+Absence, <a href="#276">276</a>.<br>
+Accent, country, <a href="#342">342</a>, <a href="#XCIV">XCIV</a>.<br>
+Accidents, <a href="#59">59</a>, <a href="#310">310</a>.<br>
+Acquaintances, <a href="#426">426</a>. SEE FRIENDS.<br>
+Acknowledgements, <a href="#225">225</a>.<br>
+Actions, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#7">7</a>, <a href="#57">57</a>, <a href="#58">58</a>, <a href="#160">160</a>,
+<a href="#161">161</a>, <a href="#382">382</a>, <a href="#409">409</a>, <a href="#CXX">CXX</a>.<br>
+Actors, <a href="#256">256</a>.<br>
+Admiration, <a href="#178">178</a>, <a href="#294">294</a>, <a href="#474">474</a>.<br>
+Adroitness of mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Adversity, <a href="#25">25</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of Friends, <a href="#XV">XV</a>.<br>
+Advice, <a href="#110">110</a>, <a href="#116">116</a>, <a href="#283">283</a>, <a href="#378">378</a>,
+<a href="#CXVII">CXVII</a>.<br>
+Affairs, <a href="#453">453</a>, <a href="#R II">R II</a>.<br>
+Affectation, <a href="#134">134</a>, <a href="#493">493</a>.<br>
+Affections, <a href="#232">232</a>.<br>
+Afflictions, <a href="#233">233</a>, <a href="#355">355</a>, <a href="#362">362</a>, <a href="#493">493</a>,
+ <a href="#XCVII">XCVII</a>, <a href="#XV">XV</a>.<br>
+Age, <a href="#222">222</a>, <a href="#405">405</a>, <a href="#LXXIII">LXXIII</a>. SEE Old Age.<br>
+Agreeableness, <a href="#255">255</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Agreement, <a href="#240">240</a>.<br>
+Air, <a href="#399">399</a>, <a href="#495">495</a>, <a href="#R.7">R.7</a>.<br>
+&mdash; Of a Citizen, <a href="#393">393</a>.<br>
+Ambition, <a href="#24">24</a>, <a href="#91">91</a>, <a href="#246">246</a>, <a href="#293">293</a>,
+<a href="#490">490</a>.<br>
+Anger, <a href="#XXX">XXX</a>.<br>
+Application, <a href="#41">41</a>, <a href="#243">243</a>.<br>
+Appearances, <a href="#64">64</a>, <a href="#166">166</a>, <a href="#199">199</a>, <a href="#256">256</a>,
+<a href="#302">302</a>, <a href="#431">431</a>, <a href="#457">457</a>, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Conformity of Manners with,
+R.7.<br>
+Applause, <a href="#272">272</a>.<br>
+Approbation, <a href="#51">51</a>, <a href="#280">280</a>.<br>
+Artifices, <a href="#117">117</a>, <a href="#124">124</a>, <a href="#125">125</a>, <a href="#126">126</a>,
+<a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Astonishment, <a href="#384">384</a>.<br>
+Avarice, <a href="#167">167</a>, <a href="#491">491</a>, <a href="#492">492</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Ballads, <a href="#211">211</a>.<br>
+Beauty, <a href="#240">240</a>, <a href="#474">474</a>, <a href="#497">497</a>, <a href="#LI">LI</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of the Mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Bel esprit defined, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Benefits, <a href="#14">14</a>, <a href="#298">298</a>, <a href="#299">299</a>, <a href="#301">301</a>,
+<a href="#CXXII">CXXII</a>.<br>
+Benefactors, <a href="#96">96</a>, <a href="#317">317</a>, <a href="#CXXII">CXXII</a>.<br>
+Blame, <a href="#CVIII">CVIII</a>.<br>
+Blindness, <a href="#XIX">XIX</a>.<br>
+Boasting, <a href="#141">141</a>, <a href="#307">307</a>.<br>
+Boredom, <a href="#141">141</a>, <a href="#304">304</a>, <a href="#352">352</a>. SEE Ennui.<br>
+Bouts rim&eacute;s, <a href="#382">382</a>, <a href="#CXX">CXX</a>.<br>
+Bravery, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#213">213</a>, <a href="#214">214</a>, <a href="#215">215</a>,
+<a href="#216">216</a>, <a href="#217">217</a>, <a href="#219">219</a>, <a href="#220">220</a>,
+<a href="#221">221</a>, <a href="#365">365</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#504">504</a>. SEE Courage and Valour.<br>
+Brilliancy of Mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Brilliant things, <a href="#LII">LII</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Capacity, <a href="#375">375</a>.<br>
+Caprice, <a href="#45">45</a>.<br>
+Chance, <a href="#57">57</a>, <a href="#344">344</a>, <a href="#XCV">XCV</a>. SEE Fortune.<br>
+Character, <a href="#LVI">LVI</a>, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Chastity, <a href="#1">1</a>. SEE Virtue of Women.<br>
+Cheating, <a href="#114">114</a>, <a href="#127">127</a>.<br>
+Circumstances, <a href="#59">59</a>, <a href="#470">470</a>.<br>
+Civility, <a href="#260">260</a>.<br>
+Clemency, <a href="#15">15</a>, <a href="#16">16</a>.<br>
+Cleverness, <a href="#162">162</a>, <a href="#269">269</a>, <a href="#245">245</a>, <a href="#399">399</a>.<br>
+Coarseness, <a href="#372">372</a>.<br>
+Comedy, <a href="#211">211</a>, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+Compassion, <a href="#463">463</a>. SEE Pity.<br>
+Complaisance, <a href="#481">481</a>, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Conduct, <a href="#163">163</a>, <a href="#277">227</a>, <a href="#378">378</a>, <a href="#CXVII">CXVII</a>.<br>
+Confidants, whom we make, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Confidence, <a href="#239">239</a>, <a href="#365">365</a>, <a href="#475">475</a>, <a href="#XLIX">XLIX</a>,
+<a href="#R.I">R.1</a>, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Confidence, difference from Sincerity<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, defined, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Consolation, <a href="#325">325</a>.<br>
+Constancy, <a href="#19">19</a>, <a href="#20">20</a>, <a href="#21">21</a>, <a href="#175">175</a>,
+<a href="#176">176</a>, <a href="#420">420</a>.<br>
+Contempt, 322.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of Death, <a href="#504">504</a>.<br>
+Contentment, <a href="#LXXX">LXXX</a>.<br>
+Contradictions, <a href="#478">478</a>.<br>
+Conversation, <a href="#139">139</a>, <a href="#140">140</a>, <a href="#142">142</a>, <a href="#312">312</a>,
+<a href="#313">313</a>, <a href="#314">314</a>, <a href="#364">364</a>, <a href="#391">391</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#421">421</a>, <a href="#CIV">CIV</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Copies, <a href="#133">133</a>.<br>
+Coquetry, <a href="#241">241</a>. SEE Flirtation.<br>
+Country Manner, <a href="#393">393</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Accent, <a href="#342">342</a>.<br>
+Courage, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#214">214</a>, <a href="#215">215</a>, <a href="#216">216</a>, <a href="#219">219</a>,
+<a href="#221">221</a>, <a href="#XLII">XLII</a>. SEE Bravery.<br>
+Covetousness, opposed to Reason, <a href="#469">469</a><br>
+Cowardice, <a href="#215">215</a>, <a href="#480">480</a>.<br>
+Cowards, <a href="#370">370</a>.<br>
+Crimes, <a href="#183">183</a>, <a href="#465">465</a>, <a href="#XXXV">XXXV</a>, <a href="#XXXVII">XXXVII</a>.<br>
+Cunning, <a href="#126">126</a>, <a href="#129">129</a>, <a href="#394">394</a>, <a href="#407">407</a>.<br>
+Curiosity, <a href="#173">173</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Danger, <a href="#XLII">XLII</a>.<br>
+Death, <a href="#21">21</a>, <a href="#23">23</a>, <a href="#26">26</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Contempt of, <a href="#504">504</a>.<br>
+Deceit, <a href="#86">86</a>, <a href="#117">117</a>, <a href="#118">118</a>, <a href="#124">124</a>, <a href="#127">127</a>,
+<a href="#129">129</a>, <a href="#395">395</a>, <a href="#434">434</a>. SEE ALSO<br>
+ Self-Deceit.<br>
+Deception, <a href="#CXXI">CXXI</a>.<br>
+Decency, <a href="#447">447</a>.<br>
+Defects, <a href="#31">31</a>, <a href="#90">90</a>, <a href="#493">493</a>, <a href="#LXXII">LXXII</a>. SEE Faults.<br>
+Delicacy, <a href="#128">128</a>, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Dependency, result of Confidence, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Designs, <a href="#160">160</a>, <a href="#161">161</a>.<br>
+Desires, <a href="#439">439</a>, <a href="#469">469</a>, <a href="#LXXXII">LXXXII</a>, <a href="#LXXXV">LXXXV</a>.<br>
+Despicable Persons, <a href="#322">322</a>.<br>
+Detail, Mind given to, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Details, <a href="#41">41</a>, <a href="#106">106</a>.<br>
+Devotion, <a href="#427">427</a>.<br>
+Devotees, <a href="#427">427</a>.<br>
+Devout, <a href="#LXXVI">LXXVI</a>.<br>
+Differences, <a href="#135">135</a>.<br>
+Dignities, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+Discretion, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Disguise, <a href="#119">119</a>, <a href="#246">246</a>, <a href="#282">282</a>.<br>
+Disgrace, <a href="#235">235</a>, <a href="#412">412</a>.<br>
+Dishonour, <a href="#326">326</a>, <a href="#LXIX">LXIX</a>.<br>
+Distrust, <a href="#84">84</a>, <a href="#86">86</a>, <a href="#335">335</a>.<br>
+Divination, <a href="#425">425</a>.<br>
+Doubt, <a href="#348">348</a>.<br>
+Docility, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Dupes, <a href="#87">87</a>, <a href="#102">102</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Education, <a href="#261">261</a>.<br>
+Elevation, <a href="#399">399</a>, <a href="#400">400</a>, <a href="#403">403</a>.<br>
+Eloquence, <a href="#8">8</a>, <a href="#249">249</a>, <a href="#250">250</a>.<br>
+Employments, <a href="#164">164</a>, <a href="#419">419</a>, <a href="#449">449</a>.<br>
+Enemies, <a href="#114">114</a>, <a href="#397">397</a>, <a href="#458">458</a>, <a href="#463">463</a>.<br>
+Ennui, <a href="#122">122</a>, <a href="#141">141</a>, <a href="#304">304</a>, <a href="#312">312</a>,
+<a href="#352">352</a>, <a href="#CXII">CXII</a>, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Envy, <a href="#27">27</a>, <a href="#28">28</a>, <a href="#280">280</a>, <a href="#281">281</a>, <a href="#328">328</a>,
+<a href="#376">376</a>, <a href="#433">433</a>, <a href="#476">476</a>, <a href="#486">486</a>.<br>
+Epithets assigned to the Mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Esteem, <a href="#296">296</a>.<br>
+Establish, <a href="#56">56</a>, <a href="#280">280</a>.<br>
+Evils, <a href="#121">121</a>, <a href="#197">197</a>, <a href="#269">269</a>, <a href="#454">454</a>,
+<a href="#464">464</a>, <a href="#XCIII">XCIII</a>.<br>
+Example, <a href="#230">230</a>.<br>
+Exchange of secrets, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Experience, <a href="#405">405</a>.<br>
+Expedients, <a href="#287">287</a>.<br>
+Expression, refined, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Faculties of the Mind, <a href="#174">174</a>.<br>
+Failings, <a href="#397">397</a>, <a href="#403">403</a>.<br>
+Falseness, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, disguised, <a href="#282">282</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, kinds of, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Familiarity, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Fame, <a href="#157">157</a>.<br>
+Farces, men compared to, <a href="#211">211</a>.<br>
+Faults, <a href="#37">37</a>, <a href="#112">112</a>, <a href="#155">155</a>, <a href="#184">184</a>,
+<a href="#190">190</a>, <a href="#194">194</a>, <a href="#196">196</a>, <a href="#251">251</a>, <a href="#354">354</a>,
+<a href="#365">365</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#372">372</a>, <a href="#397">397</a>, <a href="#403">403</a>, <a href="#411">411</a>, <a href="#428">428</a>,
+ <a href="#493">493</a>, <a href="#494">494</a>, <a href="#V">V</a>, <a href="#LXV">LXV</a>, <a href="#CX">CX</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#CXV">CXV</a>.<br>
+Favourites, <a href="#55">55</a>.<br>
+Fear, <a href="#370">370</a>, <a href="#LXVIII">LXVIII</a>.<br>
+Feeling, <a href="#255">255</a>.<br>
+Ferocity, <a href="#XXXIII">XXXIII</a>.<br>
+Fickleness, <a href="#179">179</a>, <a href="#181">181</a>, <a href="#498">498</a>.<br>
+Fidelity, <a href="#247">247</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, hardest test of, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; in love, <a href="#331">331</a>, <a href="#381">381</a>, <a href="#C">C</a>.<br>
+Figure and air, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+Firmness, <a href="#19">19</a>, <a href="#479">479</a>.<br>
+Flattery, <a href="#123">123</a>, <a href="#144">144</a>, <a href="#152">152</a>, <a href="#198">198</a>,
+<a href="#320">320</a>, <a href="#329">329</a>.<br>
+Flirts, <a href="#406">406</a>, <a href="#418">418</a>.<br>
+Flirtation, <a href="#107">107</a>, <a href="#241">241</a>, <a href="#277">277</a>, <a href="#332">332</a>,
+<a href="#334">334</a>, <a href="#349">349</a>, <a href="#376">376</a>, <a href="#LXIV">LXIV</a>.<br>
+Follies, <a href="#156">156</a>, <a href="#300">300</a>, <a href="#408">408</a>, <a href="#416">416</a>.<br>
+Folly, <a href="#207">207</a>, <a href="#208">208</a>, <a href="#209">209</a>, <a href="#210">210</a>,
+<a href="#231">231</a>, <a href="#300">300</a>, <a href="#310">310</a>, <a href="#311">311</a>, <a href="#318">318</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#XXIV">XXIV</a>.<br>
+Fools, <a href="#140">140</a>, <a href="#210">210</a>, <a href="#310">309</a>, <a href="#318">318</a>,
+<a href="#357">357</a>, <a href="#414">414</a>, <a href="#451">451</a>, <a href="#456">456</a>,<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, old, <a href="#444">444</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, witty, <a href="#451">451</a>, <a href="#456">456</a>.<br>
+Force of Mind, <a href="#30">30</a>, <a href="#42">42</a>, <a href="#237">237</a>.<br>
+Forgetfulness, <a href="#XXVI">XXVI</a>.<br>
+Forgiveness, <a href="#330">330</a>.<br>
+Fortitude, <a href="#19">19</a>. SEE Bravery.<br>
+Fortune, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#17">17</a>, <a href="#45">45</a>, <a href="#52">52</a>, <a href="#53">53</a>,
+<a href="#58">58</a>, <a href="#60">60</a>, <a href="#61">61</a>, <a href="#154">154</a>, <a href="#212">212</a>,
+<a href="#227">227</a>, <a href="#323">323</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#343">343</a>, <a href="#380">380</a>, <a href="#391">391</a>, <a href="#392">392</a>, <a href="#399">399</a>,
+ <a href="#403">403</a>, <a href="#435">435</a>, <a href="#449">449</a>, <a href="#IX">IX</a>., <a href="#CXIX">CXIX</a>.<br>
+Friends, <a href="#84">84</a>, <a href="#114">114</a>, <a href="#179">179</a>, <a href="#235">235</a>,
+<a href="#279">279</a>, <a href="#315">315</a>, <a href="#319">319</a>, <a href="#428">428</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, adversity of, <a href="#XV">XV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, disgrace of, <a href="#235">235</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, faults of, <a href="#428">428</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, true ones, <a href="#LXXXVI">LXXXVI</a>.<br>
+Friendship, <a href="#80">80</a>, <a href="#81">81</a>, <a href="#83">83</a>, <a href="#376">376</a>, <a href="#410">410</a>,
+<a href="#427">427</a>, <a href="#440">440</a>, <a href="#441">441</a>, <a href="#443">473</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#XXII">XXII</a>, <a href="#CXXIV">CXXIV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, defined, <a href="#83">83</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, women do not care for,
+<a href="#440">440</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, rarer than love, <a href="#473">473</a>.<br>
+Funerals, <a href="#XXXVIII">XXXVIII</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Gallantry, <a href="#100">100</a>. SEE Flirtation.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of mind, <a href="#100">100</a>.<br>
+Generosity, <a href="#246">246</a>.<br>
+Genius, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Gentleness, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Ghosts, <a href="#76">76</a>.<br>
+Gifts of the mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Glory, <a href="#157">157</a>, <a href="#198">198</a>, <a href="#221">221</a>, <a href="#268">268</a>.<br>
+Good, <a href="#121">121</a>, <a href="#185">185</a>, <a href="#229">229</a>, <a href="#238">238</a>,
+<a href="#303">303</a>, <a href="#XCIII">XCIII</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, how to be, <a href="#XLVII">XLVII</a>.<br>
+Goodness, <a href="#237">237</a>, <a href="#275">275</a>, <a href="#284">284</a>, <a href="#XLVI">XLVI</a>.<br>
+Good grace, <a href="#67">67</a>, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+Good man, who is a, <a href="#206">206</a>.<br>
+God nature, <a href="#481">481</a>.<br>
+Good qualities, <a href="#29">29</a>, <a href="#90">90</a>, <a href="#337">337</a>, <a href="#365">365</a>,
+<a href="#397">397</a>, <a href="#462">462</a>.<br>
+Good sense, <a href="#67">67</a>, <a href="#347">347</a>, <a href="#CVI">CVI</a>.<br>
+Good taste, <a href="#258">258</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, rarity of, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, women, <a href="#368">368</a>, <a href="#XCVI">XCVI</a>.<br>
+Government of others, <a href="#151">151</a>.<br>
+Grace, <a href="#67">67</a>.<br>
+Gracefulness, <a href="#240">240</a>.<br>
+Gratitude, <a href="#223">223</a>, <a href="#224">224</a>, <a href="#225">225</a>, <a href="#279">279</a>,
+<a href="#298">298,</a> <a href="#438">438</a>, <a href="#XLIII">XLIII</a>.<br>
+Gravity, <a href="#257">257</a>.<br>
+Great men, what they cannot acquire, <a href="#LXXXIV">LXXXIV</a>.<br>
+Great minds, <a href="#142">142</a>.<br>
+Great names, <a href="#94">94</a>.<br>
+Greediness, <a href="#66">66</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Habit, <a href="#426">426</a>.<br>
+Happy, who are, <a href="#49">49</a>.<br>
+Happiness, <a href="#48">48</a>, <a href="#61">61</a>, <a href="#VII">VII</a>, <a href="#LXXX">LXXX</a>,
+<a href="#LXXXI">LXXXI</a>.<br>
+hatred, <a href="#338">338</a>.<br>
+Head, <a href="#102">102</a>, <a href="#108">108</a>.<br>
+Health, <a href="#188">188</a>, <a href="#LVII">LVII</a>.<br>
+Heart, <a href="#98">98</a>, <a href="#102">102</a>, <a href="#103">103</a>, <a href="#108">108</a>,
+<a href="#478">478</a>, <a href="#484">484</a>.<br>
+Heroes, <a href="#24">24</a>, <a href="#53">53</a>, <a href="#185">185</a>.<br>
+Honesty, 202<a href="#202"></a>, <a href="#206">206</a>.<br>
+Honour, <a href="#270">270</a>.<br>
+Hope, <a href="#168">168</a>, <a href="#LXVIII">LXVIII</a>.<br>
+Humility, <a href="#254">254</a>, <a href="#358">358</a>, <a href="#LXXVI">LXXVI</a>, <a href="#LXXIX">LXXIX</a><br>
+Humiliation, <a href="#272">272</a>.<br>
+Humour, 47<a href="#47"></a>. SEE Temper.<br>
+Hypocrisy, <a href="#218">218</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of afflictions, <a href="#233">233</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Idleness, <a href="#169">169</a>, <a href="#266">266</a>, <a href="#267">267</a>, <a href="#398">398</a>,
+<a href="#482">482</a>, <a href="#487">487</a>, <a href="#XVIII">XVIII</a>., <a href="#LV">LV</a>.<br>
+Ills, <a href="#174">174</a>. SEE Evils.<br>
+Illusions, <a href="#123">123</a>.<br>
+Imagination, <a href="#478">478</a>.<br>
+Imitation, <a href="#230">230</a>, <a href="#XLIV">XLIV</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Impertinence, <a href="#502">502</a>.<br>
+Impossibilities, <a href="#30">30</a>.<br>
+Incapacity, <a href="#126">126</a>.<br>
+Inclination, <a href="#253">253</a>, <a href="#390">390</a>.<br>
+Inconsistency, <a href="#135">135</a>.<br>
+Inconstancy, <a href="#181">181</a>.<br>
+Inconvenience, <a href="#242">242</a>.<br>
+Indifference, <a href="#172">172</a>, <a href="#XXIII">XXIII</a>.<br>
+Indiscretion, <a href="#429">429</a>.<br>
+Indolence. SEE Idleness, and Laziness.<br>
+Infidelity, <a href="#359">359</a>, <a href="#360">360</a>, <a href="#381">381</a>, <a href="#429">429</a>.<br>
+Ingratitude, <a href="#96">96</a>, <a href="#226">226</a>, <a href="#306">306</a>, <a href="#317">317</a>.<br>
+Injuries, <a href="#14">14</a>.<br>
+Injustice, <a href="#78">78</a>.<br>
+Innocence, <a href="#465">465</a>.<br>
+Instinct, <a href="#123">123</a>.<br>
+Integrity, <a href="#170">170</a>.<br>
+Interest, <a href="#39">39</a>, <a href="#40">40</a>, <a href="#66">66</a>, <a href="#85">85</a>, <a href="#172">172</a>,
+<a href="#187">187</a>, <a href="#232">232</a>, <a href="#253">253</a>, <a href="#305">305</a>, <a href="#390">390</a>.<br>
+Interests, <a href="#66">66</a>.<br>
+Intrepidity, <a href="#217">217</a>, <a href="#XL">XL</a>.<br>
+Intrigue, <a href="#73">73</a>.<br>
+Invention, <a href="#287">287</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Jealousy, <a href="#28">28</a>, <a href="#32">32</a>, <a href="#324">324</a>, <a href="#336">336</a>,
+<a href="#359">359</a>,
+<a href="#361">361</a>, <a href="#446">446</a>, <a href="#503">503</a>, <a href="#CII">CII</a>.<br>
+Joy, <a href="#XIV">XIV</a>.<br>
+Judges, <a href="#268">268</a>.<br>
+Judgment, <a href="#89">89</a>, <a href="#97">97</a>, <a href="#248">248</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of the World, <a href="#212">212</a>, <a href="#455">455</a>.<br>
+Justice, <a href="#78">78</a>, <a href="#458">458</a>, <a href="#XII">XII</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Kindness, <a href="#14">14</a>, <a href="#85">85</a>.<br>
+Knowledge, <a href="#106">106</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Labour of Body, effect of, <a href="#LXXVII">LXXVII</a>.<br>
+Laments, <a href="#355">355</a>.<br>
+Laziness, <a href="#367">367</a>. SEE Idleness.<br>
+Leader, <a href="#43">43</a>.<br>
+Levity, <a href="#179">179</a>, <a href="#181">181</a>.<br>
+Liberality, <a href="#167">167</a>, <a href="#263">263</a>.<br>
+Liberty in Society, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Limits to Confidence, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Little Minds, <a href="#142">142</a>.<br>
+Love, <a href="#168">68</a>, <a href="#69">69</a>, <a href="#70">70</a>, <a href="#71">71</a>, <a href="#72">72</a>,
+<a href="#73">73</a>,
+<a href="#74">74</a>, <a href="#75">75</a>, <a href="#76">76</a>, <a href="#136">136</a>, <a href="#259">259</a>,
+<a href="#262">262</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#274">274</a>, <a href="#286">286</a>, <a href="#296">296</a>, <a href="#321">321</a>, <a href="#335">335</a>,
+ <a href="#336">336</a>, <a href="#348">348</a>, <a href="#349">349</a>, <a href="#351">351</a>, <a href="#353">353</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#361">361</a>, <a href="#371">371</a>, <a href="#374">374</a>, <a href="#385">385</a>, <a href="#395">395</a>,
+ <a href="#396">396</a>, <a href="#402">402</a>, <a href="#417">417</a>, <a href="#418">418</a>, <a href="#422">422</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#430">430</a>, <a href="#440">440</a>, <a href="#441">441</a>, <a href="#459">459</a>, <a href="#466">466</a>,
+ <a href="#471">471</a>, <a href="#473">473</a>, <a href="#499">499</a>, <a href="#500">500</a>, <a href="#501">501</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#X">X</a>, <a href="#XI">XI</a>, <a href="#XIII">XIII</a>, <a href="#LVIII">LVIII</a>, <a href="#LX">LX</a>,
+ <a href="#LXII">LXII</a>, <a href="#LXXXVIII">LXXXVIII</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#XCIX">XCIX</a>, <a href="# CIII"> CIII</a>, <a href="#CXXI">CXXI</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash; defined, <a href="#68">68</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Coldness in, <a href="#LX">LX</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Effect of absence on, <a href="#276">276</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash; akin to Hate, <a href="#111">111</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash; of Women, <a href="#466">466</a>, <a href="#471">471</a>, <a href="#499">499</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Novelty in, <a href="#274">274</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Infidelity in, <a href="#LXIV">LXIV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Old age of, <a href="#430">430</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Cure for, <a href="#417">417</a>, <a href="#459">459</a>.<br>
+Loss of Friends, <a href="#XLV">XLV</a>.<br>
+Lovers, <a href="#312">312</a>, <a href="#362">362</a>, <a href="#LXXXVII">LXXXVII</a>, <a href="#XCVII">XCVII</a>.<br>
+Lunatic, <a href="#353">353</a>.<br>
+Luxury, <a href="#LIV">LIV</a>.<br>
+Lying, <a href="#63">63</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Madmen, <a href="#353">353</a>, <a href="#414">414</a>.<br>
+Malady, <a href="#LVII">LVII</a>.<br>
+Magistrates, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Magnanimity, <a href="#248">248</a>, <a href="#LIII">LIII</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; defined, <a href="#285">285</a>.<br>
+Malice, <a href="#483">483</a>.<br>
+Manners, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+Mankind, <a href="#436">436</a>,<a href="# XXXVI"> XXXVI</a>.<br>
+Marriages, <a href="#113">113</a>.<br>
+Maxims, <a href="#LXVII">LXVII</a>.<br>
+Mediocrity, <a href="#375">375</a>.<br>
+Memory, <a href="#89">89</a>, <a href="#313">313</a>.<br>
+Men easier to know than Man, <a href="#436">436</a>.<br>
+Merit, <a href="#50">50</a>, <a href="#92">92</a>, <a href="#95">95</a>, <a href="#153">153</a>, <a href="#156">156</a>,
+<a href="#165">165</a>, <a href="#166">166</a>, <a href="#273">273</a>, <a href="#291">291</a>, <a href="#379">379</a>,<br>
+<a href="#401">401</a>, <a href="#437">437</a>, <a href="#455">455</a>, <a href="#CXVIII">CXVIII</a>.<br>
+Mind, <a href="#101">101</a>, <a href="#103">103</a>, <a href="#265">265</a>, <a href="#357">357</a>, <a href="#448">448</a>,
+<a href="#482">482</a>, <a href="#CIX">CIX</a>.<br>
+Mind, Capacities of, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Miserable, <a href="#49">49</a>.<br>
+Misfortunes, <a href="#19">19</a>, <a href="#24">24</a>, <a href="#174">174</a>, <a href="#325">325</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of Friends. <a href="#XV">XV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of Enemies, <a href="#463">463</a>.<br>
+Mistaken people, <a href="#386">386</a>.<br>
+Mistrust, <a href="#86">86</a>.<br>
+Mockery, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Moderation, <a href="#17">17</a>, <a href="#18">18</a>, <a href="#293">293</a>, <a href="#308">308</a>, <a href="#III">III</a>,
+<a href="#IV">IV</a>.<br>
+Money, Man compared to, <a href="#XXXII">XXXII</a>.<br>
+Motives, <a href="#409">409</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Names, Great, <a href="#95">94</a>.<br>
+Natural goodness, <a href="#275">275</a>.<br>
+Natural, to be, <a href="#431">431</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, always pleasing, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+Nature, <a href="#53">53</a>, <a href="#153">153</a>, <a href="#189">189</a>, <a href="#365">365</a>,
+<a href="#404">404</a>.<br>
+Negotiations, <a href="#278">278</a>.<br>
+Novelty in study, <a href="#178">178</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; in love, <a href="#274">274</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; in friendship, <a href="#426">426</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Obligations, <a href="#299">299</a>, <a href="#317">317</a>, <a href="#438">438</a>. SEE Benefits and Gratitude.<br>
+Obstinacy, <a href="#234">234</a>, <a href="#424">424</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; its cause, <a href="#265">265</a>.<br>
+Occasions. SEE Opportunities.<br>
+Old Age, <a href="#109">109</a>, <a href="#210">210</a>, <a href="#418">418</a>, <a href="#423">423</a>,
+<a href="#430">430</a>, <a href="#461">461</a>.<br>
+Old Men, <a href="#93">93</a>.<br>
+Openness of heart, R.1.<br>
+Opinions, <a href="#13">13</a>, <a href="#234">234</a>, <a href="#CXXIII">CXXIII</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Opinionatedness, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Opportunities, <a href="#345">345</a>, <a href="#453">453</a>, <a href="#CV">CV</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Passions, <a href="#5">5</a>, <a href="#6">6</a>, <a href="#8">8</a>, <a href="#9">9</a>, <a href="#10">10</a>,
+<a href="#11">11</a>, <a href="#12">12</a>, <a href="#122">122</a>, <a href="#188">188</a>, <a href="#266">266</a>,
+<a href="#276">276</a>, <a href="#404">404</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#422">422</a>, <a href="#443">443</a>, <a href="#460">460</a>, <a href="#471">471</a>, <a href="#477">477</a>,
+ <a href="#484">484</a>, <a href="#485">485</a>, <a href="#486">486</a>, <a href="#500">500</a>, <a href="#II">II</a>.<br>
+Peace of Mind, <a href="#VIII">VIII</a>.<br>
+Penetration, <a href="#377">377</a>, <a href="#425">425</a>, <a href="#CXVI">CXVI</a>.<br>
+Perfection, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Perseverance, <a href="#177">177</a>.<br>
+Perspective, <a href="#104">104</a>.<br>
+Persuasion, <a href="#8">8</a>.<br>
+Philosophers, <a href="#46">46</a>, <a href="#54">54</a>, <a href="#504">504</a>, <a href="#XXI">XXI</a>.<br>
+Philosophy, <a href="#22">22</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of a Footman, <a href="#504">504</a>, <a href="#LXXV">LXXV</a>.<br>
+Pity, <a href="#264">264</a>.<br>
+Pleasing, <a href="#413">413</a>, <a href="#CXXV">CXXV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Mode of, <a href="#XLVIII">XLVIII</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Mind a, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Point of view, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Politeness, <a href="#372">372</a>, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Politeness of Mind, <a href="#99">99</a>.<br>
+Praise, <a href="#143">143</a>, <a href="#144">144</a>, <a href="#145">145</a>, <a href="#146">146</a>, <a href="#147">147</a>,
+<a href="#148">148</a>, <a href="#149">149</a>, <a href="#150">150</a>, <a href="#272">272</a>, <a href="#356">356</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#432">432</a>, <a href="#XXVII">XXVII</a>, <a href="#CVII">CVII</a>.<br>
+Preoccupation, <a href="#92">92</a>, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+Pride, <a href="#33">33</a>, <a href="#34">34</a>, <a href="#35">35</a>, <a href="#36">36</a>, <a href="#37">37</a>,
+<a href="#228">228</a>,
+<a href="#234">234</a>, <a href="#239">239</a>, <a href="#254">254</a>, <a href="#267">267</a>, <a href="#281">281</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#450">450</a>, <a href="#462">462</a>, <a href="#463">463</a>, <a href="#472">472</a>,
+ <a href="#VI">VI</a>, <a href="#XIX">XIX</a>.<br>
+Princes, <a href="#15">15</a>, <a href="#320">320</a>.<br>
+Proceedings, <a href="#170">170</a>.<br>
+Productions of the Mind, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Professions, <a href="#256">256</a>.<br>
+Promises, <a href="#38">38</a>.<br>
+Proportion, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Propriety, <a href="#447">447</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; in Women, <a href="#XXXIV">XXXIV</a>.<br>
+Prosperity, <a href="#25">25</a>.<br>
+Providence, <a href="#XXXIX">XXXIX</a>.<br>
+Prudence, 65, <a href="#LXXXVIII">LXXXVIII</a>, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Qualities, <a href="#29">29</a>, <a href="#162">162</a>, <a href="#397">397</a>, <a href="#470">470</a>,
+<a href="#498">498</a>, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>, <a href="#R.VII">R.VII</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Bad, <a href="#468">468</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Good, <a href="#88">88</a>, <a href="#337">337</a>, <a href="#462">462</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Great, <a href="#159">159</a>, <a href="#433">433</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, of Mind, classified, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Quarrels, <a href="#496">496</a>,<br>
+Quoting oneself, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Raillery, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Rank, <a href="#401">401</a>.<br>
+Reason, <a href="#42">42</a>, <a href="#105">105</a>, <a href="#325">325</a>, <a href="#365">365</a>,
+<a href="#467">467</a>, <a href="#469">469</a>, <a href="#XX">XX</a>, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Recollection in Memory{, <a href="#313">313</a>}.<br>
+Reconciliation, <a href="#82">82</a>.<br>
+Refinement, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>.<br>
+Regret, <a href="#355">355</a>.<br>
+Relapses, <a href="#193">193</a>.<br>
+Remedies, <a href="#288">288</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; for love <a href="#459">459</a>.<br>
+Remonstrances, <a href="#37">37</a>.<br>
+Repentance, <a href="#180">180</a>.<br>
+Repose, <a href="#268">268</a>.<br>
+Reproaches, <a href="#148">148</a>.<br>
+Reputation, <a href="#268">268</a>, <a href="#412">412</a>.<br>
+Resolution, <a href="#L">L</a>.<br>
+Revenge, <a href="#14">14</a>.<br>
+Riches, <a href="#54">54</a>.<br>
+Ridicule, <a href="#133">133</a>, <a href="#134">134</a>, <a href="#326">326</a>, <a href="#418">418</a>,
+<a href="#422">422</a>.<br>
+Rules for Conversation, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Rusticity, <a href="#393">393</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Satire, <a href="#483">483</a>, <a href="#R.II">R.II</a>, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Sciences, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Secrets, <a href="#XVI">XVI</a>, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, How they should be kept, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+Self-deceit, <a href="#115">115</a>, 452.<br>
+Self-love, <a href="#2">2</a>, <a href="#3">3</a>, <a href="#4">4</a>, <a href="#228">228</a>, <a href="#236">236</a>,
+<a href="#247">247</a>,
+<a href="#261">261</a>, <a href="#262">262</a>, <a href="#339">339</a>, <a href="#494">494</a>, <a href="#500">500</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#I">I</a>, <a href="#XVII">XVII</a>, <a href="#XXVIII">XXVIII</a>, <a href="#XXXIII">XXXIII</a>,
+ <a href="#LXVI">LXVI</a>, <a href="#LXXIV">LXXIV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; in love, <a href="#262">262</a>.<br>
+Self-satisfaction, <a href="#52">51</a>.<br>
+Sensibility, <a href="#275">275</a>.<br>
+Sensible People, <a href="#347">347</a>, <a href="#CVI">CVI</a>.<br>
+Sentiment, <a href="#255">255</a>, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+Severity of Women, <a href="#204">204</a>, <a href="#333">333</a>.<br>
+Shame, <a href="#213">213</a>, <a href="#220">220</a>.<br>
+Silence, <a href="#79">79</a>, <a href="#137">137</a>, <a href="#138">138</a>, <a href="#CXIV">CXIV</a>.<br>
+Silliness. SEE Folly.<br>
+Simplicity, <a href="#289">289</a>.<br>
+Sincerity, <a href="#62">62</a>, <a href="#316">316</a>, <a href="#366">366</a>, <a href="#383">383</a>,
+<a href="#457">457</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Difference between it and
+Confidence, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, defined, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; of Lovers, <a href="#LXI">LXI</a>.<br>
+Skill, <a href="#LXIV">LXIV</a>.<br>
+Sobriety, <a href="#XXV">XXV</a>.<br>
+Society, <a href="#87">87</a>, <a href="#201">201</a>, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, Distinction between it and Friendship,
+<a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Soul, <a href="#80">80</a>, <a href="#188">188</a>, <a href="#194">194</a>.<br>
+Souls, Great, <a href="#XXXI">XXXI</a>.<br>
+Sorrows, <a href="#LXXVIII">LXXVIII</a>.<br>
+Stages of Life, <a href="#405">405</a>.<br>
+Strength of mind, <a href="#19">19</a>, <a href="#20">20</a>, <a href="#21">21</a>, <a href="#504">504</a>.<br>
+Studies, why new ones are pleasing, <a href="#178">178</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, what to study, <a href="#XCII">XCII</a>.<br>
+Subtilty, <a href="#128">128</a>.<br>
+Sun, <a href="#26">26</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Talents, <a href="#468">468</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, latent, <a href="#344">344</a>, <a href="#XCV">XCV</a>.<br>
+Talkativeness, <a href="#314">314</a>.<br>
+Taste, <a href="#13">13</a>, <a href="#109">109</a>, <a href="#252">252</a>, <a href="#390">390</a>,
+<a href="#467">467</a>, <a href="#CXX">CXX</a>, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>, <a href="#R.VI">R.VI</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, good, <a href="#258">258</a>, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, cause of diversities in, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, false, <a href="#R.III">R.III</a>.<br>
+Tears, <a href="#233">233</a>, <a href="#373">373</a>.<br>
+Temper, <a href="#47">47</a>, <a href="#290">290</a>, <a href="#292">292</a>.<br>
+Temperament, <a href="#220">220</a>, <a href="#222">222</a>, <a href="#297">297</a>, <a href="#346">346</a>.<br>
+Times for speaking, <a href="#R.V">R.V</a>.<br>
+Timidity, <a href="#169">169</a>, <a href="#480">480</a>.<br>
+Titles, <a href="#XXXII">XXXII</a>.<br>
+Tranquillity, <a href="#488">488</a>.<br>
+Treachery, <a href="#120">120</a>, <a href="#126">126</a>.<br>
+Treason, <a href="#120">120</a>.<br>
+Trickery, <a href="#86">86</a>, <a href="#350">350</a>, <a href="#XCI">XCI</a>. SEE Deceit.<br>
+Trifles, <a href="#41">41</a>.<br>
+Truth, <a href="#64">64</a>, <a href="#LI">LI</a>.<br>
+Tyranny, <a href="#R.I">R.I</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Understanding, <a href="#89">89</a>.<br>
+Untruth, <a href="#63">63</a>. SEE Lying.<br>
+Unhappy, <a href="#CXXV">CXXV</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Valour, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#213">213</a>, <a href="#214">214</a>, <a href="#215">215</a>,
+<a href="#216">216</a>. SEE Bravery and Courage.<br>
+Vanity, <a href="#137">137</a>, <a href="#158">158</a>, <a href="#200">200</a>, <a href="#232">232</a>, <a href="#388">388</a>,
+<a href="#389">389</a>, <a href="#443">443</a>, <a href="#467">467</a>, <a href="#483">483</a>.<br>
+Variety of mind, <a href="#R.IV">R.IV</a>.<br>
+Vice, <a href="#182">182</a>, <a href="#186">186</a>, <a href="#187">187</a>, <a href="#189">189</a>, <a href="#191">191</a>,
+<a href="#192">192</a>,
+<a href="#195">195</a>, <a href="#218">218</a>, <a href="#253">253</a>, <a href="#273">273</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#380">380</a>, <a href="#442">442</a>, <a href="#445">445</a>, <a href="#XXIX">XXIX</a>.<br>
+Violence, <a href="#363">363</a>, <a href="#369">369</a>, <a href="#466">466</a>, <a href="#CXIII">CXIII</a>.<br>
+Victory, <a href="#XII">XII</a>.<br>
+Virtue, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#25">25</a>, <a href="#169">169</a>, <a href="#171">171</a>, <a href="#182">182</a>,
+<a href="#186">186</a>, <a href="#187">187</a>, <a href="#189">189</a>, <a href="#200">200</a>, <a href="#218">218</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#253">253</a>, <a href="#380">380</a>, <a href="#388">388</a>, <a href="#442">442</a>, <a href="#445">445</a>,
+ <a href="#489">489</a>, <a href="#XXIX">XXIX</a>.<br>
+Virtue of Women, <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#220">220</a>, <a href="#367">367</a>, <a href="#XCVIII">XCVIII</a>.<br>
+Vivacity, <a href="#416">416</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Weakness, <a href="#130">130</a>, <a href="#445">445</a>.<br>
+Wealth, Contempt of, <a href="#301">301</a>.<br>
+Weariness. SEE Ennui.<br>
+Wicked people, <a href="#284">284</a>.<br>
+Wife jealous sometimes desirable, <a href="#LXXXIX">LXXXIX</a>.<br>
+Will, <a href="#30">30</a>.<br>
+Wisdom, <a href="#132">132</a>, <a href="#210">210</a>, <a href="#231">231</a>, <a href="#323">323</a>,
+<a href="#444">444</a>, <a href="#LXXXIII">LXXXIII</a>.<br>
+Wise Man, who is a, <a href="#203">203</a>, <a href="#XCI">XCI</a>.<br>
+Wishes, <a href="#295">295</a>.<br>
+Wit, <a href="#199">199</a>, <a href="#340">340</a>, <a href="#413">413</a>, <a href="#415">415</a>,
+<a href="#421">421</a>, <a href="#502">502</a>.<br>
+Wives, <a href="#364">364</a>, <a href="#CIV">CIV</a>.<br>
+Woman, <a href="#131">131</a>, <a href="#204">204</a>, <a href="#205">205</a>, <a href="#220">220</a>,
+<a href="#241">241</a>,
+ <a href="#277">277</a>, <a href="#332">332</a>, <a href="#333">333</a>, <a href="#334">334</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#340">340</a>, <a href="#346">346</a>, <a href="#362">362</a>, <a href="#367">367</a>, <a href="#368">368</a>,
+ <a href="#418">418</a>, <a href="#429">429</a>, <a href="#440">440</a>, <a href="#466">466</a>, <a href="#471">471</a>,<br>
+ <a href="#474">474</a>, <a href="#LXX">LXX</a>, <a href="#XC">XC</a>.<br>
+Women, Severity of, <a href="#333">333</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Virtue of, <a href="#205">205</a>, <a href="#220">220</a>, <a href="#XC">XC</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Power of, <a href="#LXXI">LXXI</a>.<br>
+Wonder, <a href="#384">384</a>.<br>
+World, <a href="#201">201</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Judgment of, <a href="#268">268</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Approbation of, <a href="#201">201</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Establishment in, <a href="#56">56</a>.<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;, Praise and censure of, <a href="#454">454</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Young men, <a href="#378">378</a>, <a href="#495">495</a>.<br>
+Youth, <a href="#271">271</a>, <a href="#341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Reflections; Or Sentences
+and Moral Maxims, by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORAL MAXIMS ***
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